• Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Ian Liddell-Grainger MP

MP for Bridgwater and West Somerset

  • Home
  • News
  • About Ian
    • Biography
    • Pay and Expenses
  • Constituency
    • Bridgwater & West Somerset
    • Councils
    • Parties
    • Elections
    • New Voters
    • Emergencies
  • Campaigns
    • Why I campaign
    • Economic Growth
    • Community Hospitals
    • Broadband
    • Cut Tourism VAT
  • Rural Issues
    • Farming
    • Rural Fair Shares
  • Media
  • Contact Me
You are here: Home / Constituency / Hinkley / WHAT’S IN THE BOX?

WHAT’S IN THE BOX?

16 March, 2023 by Ian

The main points of Jeremy Hunt’s Spring Budget

  • Cap on amount workers can accumulate in pensions savings over their lifetime before having to pay extra tax (currently £1.07m) to be abolished
  • Tax-free yearly allowance for pension pot to rise from £40,000 to £60,000 – having been frozen for nine years
  • Fuel duty frozen – the 5p cut to fuel duty on petrol and diesel, due to end in April, kept for another year
  • Alcohol taxes to rise in line with inflation from August, with new reliefs for beer, cider and wine sold in pubs
  • Tax on tobacco to increase by 2% above inflation, and 6% above inflation for hand-rolling tobacco
  • Government subsidies limiting typical household energy bills to £2,500 a year extended for three months, until the end of June
  • £200m to bring energy charges for prepayment meters into line with prices for customers paying by direct debit – affects 4m households
  • Commitment to invest £20bn over next two decades on low-carbon energy projects, with a focus on carbon capture and storage
  • Nuclear energy to be classed as environmentally sustainable for investment purposes, with promise of more public funding
  • £63m to help leisure centres with rising swimming pool heating costs, and invest to become more energy efficient
  • 30 hours of free childcare for working parents in England expanded to cover one and two-year-olds, to be rolled out in stages from April 2024
  • Families on universal credit to receive childcare support up front instead of in arrears, with the £646-a-month per child cap raised to £951
  • £600 “incentive payments” for those becoming childminders, and relaxed rules in England to let childminders look after more children
  • New fitness-to-work testing regime to qualify for health-related benefits
  • New voluntary employment scheme for disabled people in England and Wales, called Universal Support
  • Tougher requirements to look for work and increased job support for lead child carers on universal credit
  • £63m for programmes to encourage retirees over 50 back to work, “returnerships” and skills boot camps
  • Immigration rules to be relaxed for five roles in construction sector, to ease labour shortages
  • Office for Budget Responsibility predicts the UK will avoid recession in 2023, but the economy will shrink by 0.2%
  • Growth of 1.8% predicted for next year, with 2.5% in 2025 and 2.1% in 2026
  • UK’s inflation rate predicted to fall to 2.9% by the end of this year, down from 10.7% in the last three months of 2022
  • Underlying debt forecast to be 92.4% of GDP this year, rising to 93.7% in 2024
  • Main rate of corporation tax, paid by businesses on taxable profits over £250,000, confirmed to increase from 19% to 25%
  • Companies with profits between £50,000 and £250,000 to pay between 19% and 25%
  • Companies able to deduct investment in new machinery and technology to lower their taxable profits
  • Tax breaks and other benefits for 12 new Investment Zones across the UK, funded by £80m each over the next five years
  • Reduced paperwork for international traders, who will also be given longer to submit customs forms under streamlined rules
  • Commitment to raise defence spending by £11bn over the next five years
  • Prison sentences for those convicted of marketing tax avoidance schemes
  • £200m this year to help local councils in England repair potholes
  • An extra £10m over next two years for charities in England helping to prevent suicide
  • Streamlined approvals process promised for new medical products
  • £900m for new super computer facility, to help UK’s AI industry

 

 

Filed Under: Hinkley

Primary Sidebar

Recent News Posts

  • BRIDGWATER IS BRITAINS BATTERY BOOMTOWN! 18 July, 2023
  • BYE BYE BORIS 10 June, 2023
  • WHAT’S IN THE BOX? 16 March, 2023
  • POLITICAL MUSICAL CHAIRS 27 February, 2023

GOD SAVE THE KING

© 2023 All Rights Reserved
Ian Liddell-Grainger
Contact Ian | Site Map