|
Prudent for
a Purpose:
Working
for a Stronger and Fairer Britain
Key Budget measures
include:
-
the largest
ever sustained increase in NHS resources;
-
extra
spending in the coming year of £1 billion for education; and an
extra £285 million to tackle crime and £280 million to improve
transport;
-
a £4.35
a week increase for children under 16 in the Working Families
Tax Credit and a 50p a week increase next year in the Childrens
Tax Credit;
-
a further
increase in the pensioners winter fuel payment to £150 a
year;
-
road fuel
duties and most alcohol duties increased in line with inflation
and tobacco duties raised by 5% in real terms to help fund the
NHS; and
-
extending
the vehicle excise duty reduced rate to cover cars up to 1,200cc
benefiting an extra 2.2 million car owners.
How the Budget
impacts on you and your family...
By April 2001,
personal tax and benefit changes in this and previous Budgets mean
that:
-
on average,
households will be £460 a year better off;
-
families
with children will be £850 a year better off; and
-
the tax
burden on a single earner family on average earnings with 2 children
will be the lowest since 1972.
Modernising
public services...
Budget 2000 announces
further additional resources for the Governments key priorities.
For health:
-
an extra
£2 billion for the National Health Service for the year from April,
including extra revenue from the tobacco duty increase;
-
6.1 %
average annual real terms growth over the next four years
the longest period of sustained high growth in the history of
the NHS;
-
a 50%
cash increase in NHS spending over the 5 years from the beginning
of the first Comprehensive Spending Review 35% in real
terms equivalent to a rise in NHS cash spending per household
from £1,850 in 1998-99 to £2,800 in 2003-04.
The new allocations
for the NHS in the UK are set out below.
NHS
spending in the UK, cash (£ billion)
|
1998-99
|
1999-00
|
2000-01
|
2001-02
|
2002-03
|
2003-04
|
Average
|
| Previous
plan |
45.1
|
49.3
|
52.2
|
55.5
|
|
|
|
| New
provision |
45.1
|
49.3
|
54.2
|
58.6
|
63.5
|
68.7
|
|
|
Year
on year
real
growth (%)
|
|
|
7.4%
|
5.6%
|
5.6%
|
5.6%
|
6.1%
|
Note: these figures
include additions to the devolved administrations and the Northern
Ireland departments.
For other key
public services:
-
a further
£1 billion for education, providing more money for schools and
helping young people to stay on at school; and
-
an extra
£280 million for transport and an additional £285 million for
tackling crime.
Building a
fairer society...
Budget 2000 takes
further steps to support families and pensioners, ensure a
fair tax system
and protect the environment:
-
an extra
£4.35 a week for the under 16 child credit in the Working Families
Tax Credit from June (and for the child allowance in Income Support
from October) and an extra 50p a week on the Childrens Tax
Credit when it is introduced in April 2001. The value of the Childrens
Tax Credit will be more than twice the married couples allowance
(withdrawn from April 2000) which it replaces.
-
a £100
increase in the Sure Start Maternity Grant to £300 from the autumn;
-
as a result
of measures announced in this Parliament, 1.2 million children
will be lifted out of poverty;
-
support
for pensioners including a further increase in the winter fuel
payment from £100 to £150 for every household with someone over
60;
-
a boost
for savings, with the current £7,000 Individual Savings Account
(ISA) contribution limit retained for 2000-01;
-
a 5% real
increase in tobacco duty, with the additional revenue raised going
towards investment in the National Health Service;
-
a freeze
in spirits duty, while increasing other alcohol duties in line
with inflation; and
-
protecting
the environment through reforms to vehicle excise duty including
an extension of the reduced rate to cars with engines up to 1,200cc
from March 2001 benefiting 2.2 million more cars; increases
in road fuel duties in line with inflation; reforms to company
car tax to encourage the use of environmentally-friendly vehicles
and fuels; an increase in landfill tax to promote better waste
management; and a new levy on the extraction of aggregates from
2002.
Increasing
employment opportunity and making work pay...
The Government
is introducing a comprehensive set of measures and reforms to ensure
that everyone who is able to work has the chance to do so.
The number
of people in work

There are 800,000
more people in jobs than in Spring 1997. The Governments New
Deal has already helped over 185,000 young people into jobs. Long-term
unemployment has been halved, and youth unemployment cut by 70%.
Building on the
steps already announced, including a cut in the basic rate of income
tax to 22p from April, reform of national insurance contributions,
including higher earnings limits, and an increase in the National
Minimum Wage from October, Budget 2000:
-
increases
the Working Families Tax Credit, guaranteeing a minimum
income of £214 a week from April 2001 for working families with
a full-time earner;
-
ensures
that from April 2001 no family earning less than £255 a week will
pay any income tax overall;
-
introduces
a new Job Grant from spring 2001 to ease the transition from welfare
to work;
-
creates
Action Teams from autumn 2000 to help match unemployed people
in the areas of highest unemployment to suitable vacancies in
neighbouring areas;
-
extends
and enhances the New Deal programmes for 18-24s and 25+; and
-
offers
lone parents enhanced choices for work, education and training.
All lone parents on Income Support with children over 5 will meet
with a specialist adviser to guide them through these choices.
Delivering
a stable economy...
Over the past
three years the Government has been working to deliver a stable economy.
Its commitment to prudence and stability has delivered low inflation
and returned the public finances to health, ensuring no return to
the boom and bust of the past.
This prudence
is for a purpose. It means the Budget can ensure that the public finances
remain under firm control while releasing significant new resources
for health and education:
-
underlying
inflation is expected to remain close to its 21/2% target;
-
stronger
economic growth has spread to most regions and sectors of the
economy over the past year. The abolition of mortgage interest
tax relief from April 2000, and Budget increases in stamp duty
for higher value properties will help to promote stability in
the housing market;
-
there
are now more people in work than ever before up 800,000
since May 1997. Unemployment is at a 20-year low; and
-
the public
finances remain well on track to meet the Governments strict
fiscal rules to control borrowing while at the same time releasing
significant new resources for health and education.
|
|
Forecast |
|
|
1999 |
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
|
Economic
growth (%)
|
2 |
23/4
to 31/4 |
21/4 to 23/4 |
21/4 to 23/4 |
|
Underlying
inflation (%)
|
21/4 |
21/4 |
21/2 |
21/2 |
Building stronger
British businesses...
Britains
productivity lags behind that of its main competitors our output
per worker shows a gap of up to a third with countries like the US,
France and Germany. Closing this gap and raising Britains productivity
growth will mean more jobs and higher living standards in years to
come.
The productivity
gap

Budget 2000 announces
further measures to boost productivity:
-
reductions
in capital gains tax for entrepreneurs and employee shareholders;
-
permanent
40% capital allowances to encourage investment by small and medium
sized firms, and introducing enhanced 100% capital allowances
for small firms buying information and communications technology
equipment;
-
further
steps to promote electronic commerce including a £60 million package
to provide advice and information to small firms on-line, help
them get on-line, and new discounts for electronic filing of tax
returns;
-
final
details of the new all-employee share ownership plan to be introduced
in April to encourage employees to take a stake in the success
of their companies; and
-
a new
£1 billion target umbrella fund for enterprise growth to increase
early access to venture capital for small growth potential businesses
across all regions of the UK.
Where taxpayers
money is spent...
Public spending
is expected to be around £370 billion next year: around £6,000 for
each man, woman and child in the UK.
Where taxpayers
money is spent
Where taxes
come from

To order further
copies of this leaflet, obtain a Welsh translation
or an alternative format, please telephone:
0845 601 1041
For more details
of the Budget, visit the Treasurys internet site at http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk
|