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A BUDGET GUIDE
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| Date of Appointment | Chancellor |
| 26 July 1945 | Hugh Dalton |
| 15 November 1947 | Sir Stafford Cripps |
| 19 October 1950 | Hugh Gaitskell |
| 26 October 1951 | R A Butler |
| 24 December 1955 | Harold Macmillan |
| 14 January 1957 | Peter Thorneycroft |
| 7 January 1958 | Derek Heathcoat Amory |
| 27 July 1960 | J Selwyn Lloyd |
| 13 July 1962 | Reginald Maulding |
| 16 October 1964 | James Callaghan |
| 29 November 1967 | Roy Jenkins |
| 19 June 1970 | Ian Macleod (died 20 July 1970) |
| 25 July 1970 | Anthony Barber |
| 5 March 1974 | Denis Healey |
| 5 May 1979 | Sir Geoffrey Howe |
| 11 June 1983 | Nigel Lawson |
| 26 October 1989 | John Major |
| 28 November 1990 | Norman Lamont |
| 27 May 1993 | Kenneth Clarke |
| 2 May 1997 | Gordon Brown |
Nigel Lawson has been so far the longest serving Chancellor
since the war. He was appointed on 11 June 1983 and resigned on 26
October 1989, a stewardship of 6 years, 4 months. Another long serving
Chancellor was Denis Healey, serving from 5 March 1974 to 4 May 1979,
a stewardship of 5 years, 2 months. The longest serving Chancellor
this century was Lloyd George who was in office for a total of seven
years and two months between 1908 and 1915. In the nineteenth century,
W E Gladstone was Chancellor for a total of 12 years and four months
between 1852 and 1882.
Budget Resolutions
Annual and permanent taxes
Most UK taxes, including all indirect taxes, petroleum
revenue tax and taxes on capital are 'permanent'. On the other hand,
income tax, corporation tax and advanced corporation tax are annual
taxes and must be renewed each year. This annual review of certain
taxes gives the House of Commons the opportunity to review the imposition
of these taxes.
If annual taxes are reimposed as a whole, their detailed
provisions, with a couple of exceptions, remain as they were in the
previous year. The first and very important exception concerns the
indexation of personal allowances and rate bands for income tax; this
is discussed in more detail below. The second exception is that the
ceiling on relief for mortgage interest payments (currently £30,000)
needs to be fixed each year.
Legislative process
The reimposition of annual taxes, and most other tax
changes announced in the Budget are legislated in the annual Finance
Bill. This is normally published in early January and is considered
by Parliament in the Spring, with Royal Assent being given by the
start of May.
One of the key features of tax legislation, which distinguishes
it from any other legislation, is that measures announced in the Budget
may take effect before the Finance Bill is enacted. The approval of
Budget Resolutions permits this to take place.
The Budget resolutions are tabled as soon as the Chancellor
has finished the Budget speech. Under the Provisional Collection
of Taxes Act 1968, these resolutions, once passed by the House
of Commons, authorise the imposition of certain taxes or of changes
in their rates. Under the Unified Budget procedures, there is also
a resolution (unconnected to the Finance Bill) which welcomes the
Budget spending plans.
Rules for tax changes
All tax changes that are to be enacted in the Finance
Bill have to be covered by resolutions. Some changes, such as those
that increase or extend a tax, take away or reduce an existing relief,
or are to have immediate effect need specific resolutions. Other changes
can be covered by a more general resolution known as the Amendment
Law Resolution. The Amendment Law Resolution is generally the
first resolution in the list tabled at the end of the Budget speech
and is the formal subject of the Budget debate. Only the Government
can move an increase in taxes. This is because the
right to impose taxes derives from the Crown's right to demand revenue
(or supply); a demand which can only be expressed through the Government
of the day.
There is another general resolution known as the Incidental
Charges Resolution. This covers situations where the complexities
of the tax system mean than an increase income tax relief can, in
some circumstances, lead to taxpayers having to pay more on a different
tax, even though their overall tax bill is not going up.
Immediate tax changes
The Budget resolutions are tabled at the end of the
Chancellor's statement and they are voted on at the end of the Budget
debate. If passed they can then take effect. In recent years the Budget
debate has lasted for five days. To cover the intervening period,
a Resolution under Section 5 of the Provisional Collection of
Taxes Act can be moved immediately the Chancellor finishes speaking.
This Resolution cannot be debated or amended and, if approved by the
House, gives authority for specified changes to have immediate effect
pending the passage of the main Resolutions. The effect of such a
Resolution lapses if the main Resolution, to which it gives effect,
is not passed within ten sitting days. Under the procedures for Autumn
Budget's the changes on excise duties often take effect from 6pm on
Budget Day, but sometimes a later implementation date is chosen.
Time limit on main Resolutions
Furthermore, the main Resolutions themselves are temporary; the changes to which they give effect are nullified if the Finance Bill does not receive a second reading within 30 sitting days of the Resolutions being passed, or if the Bill does not receive Assent within a certain period. The 30 sitting days period was set in the 1993 Finance Act; previously it was 25 days. The deadline for Royal Assent to the Finance Act is 5 May for an Autumn Budget (for a March/April Budget it had been 5 August). The Resolutions also lapse if Parliament is dissolved or prorogued.
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