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CHANCELLOR
OF THE EXCHEQUER'S BUDGET STATEMENT - 7 MARCH 2001
Mr Deputy Speaker,
since we came into Government our first duty has been to secure economic
stability. In 1997 with
inflation rising, a 28 billion pounds deficit, and a national debt
that had doubled, the British economy was once again at risk of repeating
the old all too familiar pattern of inflation followed by recession.
There were
many who opposed our decision to make the Bank of England independent,
others who opposed the tough controls on borrowing and spending and many
also who opposed our new fiscal rules and disciplines. There were some
in this House who predicted that our policies would bring recession.
I can report
to the House that today because of the choices Britain made our country
now has:
A new won
and hard won stability which Britain must not take for granted but must
entrench. And because
there is still much to do the stability built in the first years will
be our foundation for building opportunity and prosperity for all in the
years to come. We know as
a nation that - after a generation of under-investment in both our
industries and our public services - the ambitions we have for our
country - high productivity and full employment, education opportunity
for all and an end to child poverty, a modern NHS and modern public services -
can only be realised if we make the choice to invest for the long term.
So this is
the challenge for this Budget and for the future: by our tax and fiscal
decisions, to secure rising levels of business investment and rewards
for entrepreneurship. And for all hard working British families, who deserve
the best hospitals, schools and public services, decade after decade of
past neglect and decline replaced by year after year of rising and sustained
investment and modernisation. Our greatest
long term investment is in children. I have looked back at a century and
more of past Budgets which have had one common feature: the needs of children
in the tax system go almost unrecognised; the needs of women barely mentioned.
And when the
story of Britain is of families struggling to do the best by their children,
to balance work and family life, and all the daily pressures they face,
it is right that we have a Budget that puts families first. So this is
my Budget judgement: instead of the old short-termism of looking only
a year or a month ahead, we lock in stability for the long term and, by
striking the right balance today between long term investments and affordable
tax cuts, we not only boost enterprise and savings, but meet the needs
of not just some but all Britain's families. Let me turn
to the economic background and forecasts. Between 1979
and 1997 inflation averaged 6.2 per cent. Since 1997
it has averaged less than half as much - 2.4 per cent.
In the last
year I can report inflation has averaged 2.1 per cent, the lowest
annual inflation since 1963. Interest rates
from 1979 averaged 10 per cent. Since 1997 they have averaged 6 per
cent. And remained stable over the past year, the longest period of consistently
low interest rates since the 1960s. Long term
interest rates - now around 5 per cent - are for the first
time since the 1960s as low as those in Germany and America.
Mortgage rates
which averaged eleven per cent between 1979 and 1997 are now down
to six and three quarter per cent or less. Growth from
1979 averaged 2 per cent. Since 1997 it has averaged 2.7 per cent
and in the last year I can now also report to the House the economy has
grown at 3 per cent. I can also
report that manufacturing - despite the euro sterling exchange rate -
grew last year by 1.6 per cent; manufacturing productivity grew by
4.4 per cent and manufacturing exports by 11.8 per cent; and
it is to the credit of thousands of successful British companies that
overall British exports grew by 7.4 per cent. And business
investment has grown by 2 per cent as we lock in a higher level
of investment as a share of our economy, over 14 per cent, higher
than at any time in forty years. The faster
the speed of international financial flows today, the greater the need
for international and national vigilance if stability is to be achieved
and sustained. It is precisely
because we have taken the time to get the fundamentals right and held
to a steady course that we are better placed to cope with the uncertainties
in the world economy this year. With the United
States today experiencing a necessary slowing and Japan barely growing,
the growth rate in the world's major economies this year is expected to
halve while the world still faces volatile oil prices. But because
Britain's economy remains stable, our Treasury forecast is that this year
Britain's growth will be within a sustainable range of two and a
quarter to two and three quarter per cent. And while
elsewhere business investment is falling, I can inform the House -
we are raising this year's forecast for business investment in Britain,
which will rise by between two and a half and three per cent,
continuing at an all time high of fourteen per cent of GDP -
with total investment growing by between five and a half and five and
three quarters per cent. The Treasury
forecast is that consumer demand will grow by between three and a quarter
to three and a half per cent; manufacturing growing between one and
three quarters and two per cent; exports growing between five and
a half and five and three quarters per cent. Inflation
is forecast to be two and a quarter per cent this time next
year and on target at two and a half per cent at the end of
next year. In the Budget,
the Chancellor must confirm the inflation target for the coming year.
With inflation
forecast to be two and a half per cent next year, imposing a lower
inflation target - as some have suggested - would mean upward
pressure on interest rates and risk lower growth and higher unemployment.
So I can confirm
that because stability will guide our approach, the inflation target will
remain at two and a half per cent. And my Budget
will meet each one of our fiscal rules. Let me set
out the detailed figures for the House. In the last
Budget I forecast a current surplus for the financial year 2000-2001 at
14 billion pounds. I now forecast this surplus to be 23 billions
pounds, and in successive years the current surpluses are projected to
be 17, 15, 8, 9 and 9. Over the economic cycle, even on the
most cautious of cases, we will meet our first fiscal rule and balance
the current Budget. After a doubling
of national debt in the early 1990s the ratio of net debt to national
income had, by 1997, risen to 44 per cent. Our second fiscal
rule - that debt should be at a sustainable level, below 40 per
cent of GDP - has led us since 1997 to cut the ratio of debt from
44 per cent to 42 per cent to 40 then 37 per cent
to what I can report for this financial year - 31.8 per cent.
From the unacceptable
level of debt we inherited - debt at 44 per cent of national
income - I forecast debt in the coming year will fall to 30.3 per
cent and in the following years I project 29.6, 29.7, 29.9 and 30 per
cent successively - meeting our second rule and putting Britain in
a far stronger position to deal with the ups and downs of the economic
cycle. Net borrowing,
forecast to be in surplus this financial year at 6.5 billion pounds,
now yields a surplus of 16.4 billion pounds. As we invest according
to our plans the projections for future years are 6, -1, -10, -11 and
-12. Mr Deputy
Speaker, in every one of the next five years, adjusting for the cycle,
we have locked in the tight fiscal stance we set out in both the Pre-Budget
Report and the last Budget. Because of
this and because of the spectrum cash proceeds, we are able to repay debt.
Last year we repaid 9 billion pounds. I can tell
the House that this year the net cash debt repayment will be 34 billion
pounds: more debt repaid by one British Government in one year than all
the total debt repaid by all the previous British Governments of the last
fifty years. So debt interest
payments next year are one and a half billion pounds lower than forecast
in the Pre-Budget Report, and very substantially lower than expected in
last year's Budget. In total because of the Government's prudence debt
interest payments in the coming year will be three and a half billion
pounds lower than this year, releasing resources for our priorities.
In 1997 Britain
spent more on debt interest payments than all the money it spent on our
schools. In 2001-2 we will be spending ten billion pounds a year
more on schools than on debt interest. And since
1997 lower unemployment has also reduced social security costs by 4 billion
pounds a year, again releasing resources for public services.
Whereas from
1979 to 1997 42 pence in every extra pound spent went to debt and
social security, now the figure is only 16 pence, leaving more than
80 pence in every extra pound to go direct to front-line public services.
So, because
we have cut debt and cut unemployment - and achieved higher growth and
earnings - we are also able to achieve today what has eluded Governments
for many years: to lock in a fiscal tightening, meet all our fiscal rules,
and then, within this prudent and cautious framework, to have extra resources
available in this Budget to invest, in a balanced way, in Britain's future.
A balanced
approach around which we will seek to build a consensus within the country
in the coming years that, within a stable framework, the right kind of
public investments and targeted tax cuts are both essential engines to
drive forward our economic and social ambitions for Britain.
To achieve
our first ambition - to secure the fastest productivity growth of our
competitors over the next decade - business investment must rise and today
I propose the further reforms needed to promote competition, innovation
and entrepreneurship. Competition
at home is necessary for competitiveness at home and abroad. Yesterday
the Competition Commission published its provisional findings on the banks
and small business. And the Office of Fair Trading is today publishing
its report on reform of the professions. Later in the week, the Secretary
of State for Trade and Industry will announce his proposals for reform
and detailed further consultation. Institutional
investors are responsible for assets of 1.5 trillion pounds. To promote
long term investment and to protect investors, I have accepted the recommendations
of the Myners report. We will abolish the minimum funding requirement;
through tax and regulatory reform make it easier for life insurers and
pension funds to invest in venture capital; and we will ensure both a
strengthened role for pension fund trustees and a clearer duty on fund
managers to promote beneficiaries' interests. I support the challenge
to the industry Mr Myners has laid down and his proposal that we
should be prepared to legislate as necessary to achieve the improvements
he prescribes. And so that
we secure for Britain's companies the true competitive benefits of the
single market, on Monday we will submit to European Finance Ministers
our proposals for capital and product market reform for the Stockholm
Summit and for the Spanish Presidency of 2002 a White Paper on economic
reform in Europe will be published. And just as
I will set out later our vision for the future of the tax system for work
and for families, our vision for the future of the tax system for companies,
large and small, is that by combining a wide and stable tax base with
low and stable rates and a constant commitment to international competitiveness,
we encourage innovation, investment and entrepreneurship. Building on
our reduction of the corporation tax rate from 33 pence to 30 pence, I
propose a further modernisation of the corporate tax system to meet the
needs of a more knowledge based economy. After further consultation with
business, I propose to introduce a new tax relief for intellectual
property and goodwill. We will also consult in detail on relieving tax
when companies sell substantial shareholdings. And from next month I will
abolish the withholding tax not only on international bonds but also on
payments of interest and royalties between companies in the UK. All steps
designed to create the best modern environment for business.
Enhanced capital
allowances since 1997 and new tax credits to encourage investment and
innovation have already saved business over 1 billion pounds, a third
of a billion pounds to manufacturing. It is time for the next tax
incentive to back manufacturing and innovation. Today we issue proposals
and will consult on the best way to extend a research and development
tax credit to larger companies. And we will
legislate a new and special tax credit that will help British companies
contribute to the relief of disease round the world, an incentive to accelerate
research on diseases - like Aids, TB, Malaria and other diseases - that
each year kill eight million people, including three million
children in our poorest countries: deaths that in many cases are avoidable,
diseases that in many places are preventible. We have a capacity to help
and a moral duty to act. Subject to a commitment by the pharmaceutical companies to invest in and deliver new drugs and vaccines in ways that truly meet the needs of the poor and sick, the Secretary of State for International Development and I are prepared to extend this new tax credit even further. And Britain is prepared to take a lead in establishing a new purchase fund for global health that will not only develop new life saving drugs but make existing drugs more widely available.
Mr Deputy Speaker,
as we consider the next steps for taxation in the North Sea, our approach
will be guided not by short term factors but by the need for a regime
that raises a fair share of revenue and promotes long term investment
in the North Sea. For farming,
an industry essential to Britain which today faces both immediate and
long standing difficulties, the Government, over and above its statutory
obligations, has made available agri-compensation money worth 150 million
pounds. And I can confirm that the Minister for Agriculture is taking
steps to advance agri-money and other payments. Last year
I cut the long term capital gains rate for business assets from 40 pence
to 10 pence. I can now go further. For employees in all types of
companies including venture capital and non trading companies the long
term capital gains tax rate will no longer be 40 pence but 10 pence.
Growing companies
offering share options will benefit from today's extension of the Enterprise
Management Incentive scheme. I have decided to double to 3 million
pounds the share options that benefit from tax relief and in qualifying
companies I will extend the right to benefit from these share options
to all employees. Since 1997
the number of small businesses has grown by 170,000, as we have cut small
company tax from 23 pence to 20 pence, with a new starting rate
of just 10 pence in the pound, an overall cut in the typical small
company tax bill of nearly 25 per cent. We propose
a new regime to simplify VAT for small business, which will be of direct
help to up to half a million companies. For firms
with a turnover of up to fifty four thousand pounds, VAT will not
be charged at all: more of business' income not subject to VAT in Britain
than anywhere else in Europe. For firms
with a turnover of up to one hundred thousand pounds, we propose a simpler
and lower flat rate which after consultation we will implement next year.
For firms
with a turnover of up to six hundred thousand pounds we will also consult
upon a simplified VAT payments scheme. And I now
propose not just to simplify small business VAT but to simplify small
business corporate tax. Last year
we exempted small businesses from the costly obligation to submit audited
accounts, thus cutting red tape and cutting small business costs by two
hundred and twenty million pounds. The next step
is an even more radical proposal: to make the annual company accounts
the basis for calculating tax, thus cutting more red tape and cutting
business costs once again. On Friday
the Deputy Prime Minister and I will announce new financial flexibilities
so that Regional Development Agencies can fulfill their strategic role
in delivering higher productivity and for every region balanced growth.
Our rising prosperity still leaves too many places and people behind. Nor will they catch up if we rely on the old failed policies of the past - either paying out more and more unemployment benefits without real investment or paying out untargeted property subsidies without real job creation.
I see our
inner cities and older industrial communities not as no-go areas
for new enterprise but as places of untapped potential, where there are
young people with dynamism looking for work and markets waiting to develop
and grow. Across Britain,
whether in new towns, traditional inner cities or former coal, textile
and steel communities, the way forward for regeneration is to harness
both new public and private investment and new fiscal incentives to extend
the opportunities for enterprise from some of the country to all the country.
To speed up
regeneration I now propose, after our Pre-Budget consultation, a total
of six tax cuts targeted on enterprise at a cost - over the next five
years - of one billion pounds. To make the
first stages of buying property and bringing land back into use tax free,
in designated areas stamp duty will be abolished. To bring disused
properties back into use, we will cut VAT on residential property conversions
from seventeen and a half per cent to five per cent.
For cleaning
up contaminated land, there will be an accelerated tax relief, set at
one hundred and fifty per cent, and consultation of a further corporation
tax relief for firms investing in our new Urban Regeneration Companies.
To help revitalise
our high streets, we will provide one hundred per cent first
year capital allowances for bringing empty flats over shops back into
the residential market. To cut the
cost of small business borrowing we will introduce a new community investment
tax credit and we will create the first community development venture
capital fund - a partnership between Government, financial institutions
and the charitable sector for which the chairman of our review, Sir Ronald
Cohen, proposes a capitalisation of forty million pounds. And to cut
the costs of start ups, the Small Business Service will offer one-stop
support and up to two thousand pounds worth of help for any start-up
company drawing up their business plan, making it easier than ever in
these areas to start and sustain a business. In both urban
and rural areas, our churches are essential centres for civic life and
are at the heart of our rich heritage as a nation. To help preserve that
heritage and to cut the costs of saving and repairing our listed church
buildings we will introduce for repairs started after April 1st a
new grant, the equivalent of a VAT reduction from seventeen and a
half per cent to five per cent: a reform long sought by congregations
across the country. At the centre
of our communities are also thousands of non-profit sports clubs, and
we will now consider the best way for the tax system to give them further
support and to recognise their contribution to our community life.
This Government's
policy is for free museums and I can announce that we will change the
law on VAT to make that possible. The Secretary of State for Culture
will set out the full details of the change. The film industry
tax incentive we introduced in 1997 which is contributing to the unprecedented
success now enjoyed by independent British films, will at a cost of 50 million
pounds next year be extended until 2005. My Deputy
Speaker, our ambition for Britain is full employment, employment opportunity
for all. I can report
to the House that one and a half years early and at one half of the
planned cost, we have exceeded our goal, not two hundred and fifty thousand,
but two hundred and seventy thousand young people have now moved from
welfare to work. With in total
one million one hundred thousand more men and women in work
than four years ago, Britain now has the lowest unemployment since 1975,
the lowest long term unemployment since 1979, the lowest youth unemployment
since 1975; the highest employment ever among women; with today one million
vacancies spread across the country. But there
is still more to do. The demands of the new economy mean we are likely
to need two and a half million more employees at degree or higher
degree levels, and overall more workers requiring higher skills and qualifications
to fill new and higher paying jobs. So at the
heart of our approach is that Government must meet its responsibilities,
providing incentives for work and training; companies must meet their
responsibilities to upgrade skills in the workplace; and people must take
up their responsibilities to work and to prepare for the jobs of the future.
We have already
made major changes to reward work - the New Deal, the Working Families
Tax Credit and the 10 pence income tax rate. Now we have decided
that following on stage one of the New Deal -when long term youth
unemployment has fallen by 80 per cent - it is time for stage two
designed to link those who need jobs to the jobs that need skills.
Next week
the Secretaries of State for Employment and Social Security and I will
publish detailed plans to get the hard to employ back into work; to promote
employer led sector initiatives under which the unemployed learn key skills;
and to improve training in the workplace The starting
point is a new 'employment first' principle. In the past the unemployed
signed on for benefit before they looked for work. Now before receiving
benefit the employment first principle means they will first have to be
interviewed about job opportunities and the steps they are ready to take
to get back into work. For the hard
to employ, those still left behind, we are proposing from April at a cost
of two hundred million pounds a year a new regime built around more
intensive coaching and stronger sanctions for the over twenty fives.
For thirty thousand
benefit claimants who have been drug addicts, a new three year budget
of forty million pounds will mean they can receive the mentoring
and training they need, but to get on the programme they will have to
get off drugs. We will fulfil our responsibility to help them; they must
fulfill their responsibility to become drug- free. Next, to link
the unemployed without skills to the jobs that require skills, we will
announce separate initiatives to fill job vacancies in the IT industry,
construction, hotels, retail and financial services. And as a result of
the spending review the Secretary of State for Education and Employment
has now allocated over one billion pounds so that modern apprenticeships
- seventy five thousand in 1997, over two hundred and twenty thousand
today - will rise to three hundred and twenty thousand, as we discharge
our duty to invest in the skills of the next generation. Already with the New Deal lone parent employment has increased by one hundred thousand, on the road to our goal of seventy per cent employment for lone parents. From next month at a total cost of one hundred million pounds next year we will enhance the choices on offer to include not only full and part time jobs and training but an offer of self employment, in all cases accompanied by help for child care. In return the Government has decided that from next year all lone parents on income support including parents with children under five will be required to undertake interviews about work choices at regular intervals.
And in the
new economy people already in work constantly need to improve their skills.
Britain cannot
succeed when up to thirty per cent of employees do not have the basic
level two qualifications. Here too employers, employees and Government
all have a role to play. For our part we are prepared to examine radical
new options. To back up the tax relief we offer for employee training,
we are prepared to consider how best we can help employers meet their
responsibilities, including the case for a new tax credit. If we are
to reach our long term employment goal we must also do more to reward
work. Our vision
of the future of the tax system for work is of one that by integrating
low starting rates of tax and targeted tax credits makes work pay, brings
more people into work and moves us towards our goal of full employment.
This Government
introduced the first ever national minimum wage and it is this Government
which has this week raised the minimum wage as of October this year from
£3.70 an hour to £4.10 an hour and then, next year,
subject to economic conditions, to £4.20. Today I can
go further and announce that for all families on the Working Families
Tax Credit there will be a rise from June this year of five pounds
a week. This takes the hourly minimum rate for those on the working families
tax credit not just to £4.10 an hour but to £6.40 an hour.
When we first announced the Working Families Tax Credit the minimum family
income for full time work was 180 pounds a week. This year the minimum
will be 225 pounds a week, or eleven thousand seven hundred pounds
a year. And as part of our programme to ensure new disability rights I can announce that in addition to a new guaranteed minimum income for a severely disabled person on benefit of 142 pounds a week, for those in full time work the Disabled Person's Tax Credit will also be raised from June this year by 5 pounds a week to guarantee a minimum weekly family income of 250 pounds.
To help parents
into work I have also decided to pay working families more towards the
costs of childcare. In addition
to the childcare places being created for one million children, the
child care tax credit will, from June, pay up to 70 per cent of child
care costs up to - instead of 100 pounds a week as now - 135 pounds
a week for one child and - instead of 150 pounds a week -
up to 200 pounds a week for two or more children, another step in
our plan to place affordable child care within the reach of all working
families who need it. I turn to
other measures that will help hard working families. I can announce
that for the coming financial year we will freeze all rates of car vehicle
excise duty. Having completed
our consultation on new duty rates, I will now move ahead with the proposal
to extend the 55 pounds reduction on the standard licence fee from
all cars up to 1200 cc to all cars up to and including 1.5 litres.
This will include for example Escorts, Astras, Micras and Rover Metros,
in total an extra 5 million cars. This reduction, to be implemented
in July, will be backdated to November last year. In total 9 million
cars up to I.5 litres will pay 55 pounds less. From this
month also for all newly purchased cars, a new four band vehicle excise
duty rewards the most environmentally friendly vehicles. 70 per cent
of all new cars will now enjoy a reduced licence fee. Since last
November, lorry owners have already received rebates for up to half of
this year's licence fee, a total of 220 million pounds. And following
our Pre-Budget consultation and at a cost of 300 million pounds a
year we will sweep aside the 100 separate lorry licence rates, consolidate
them into seven rate bands - linked to environmental standards and
set in consultation with the industry - cutting the rates to match the
lowest in Europe. For the lorries used most for international haulage
the fee reduction will mean savings on the old rate of between one thousand
five hundred pounds and two thousand one hundred pounds a year.
Around 115 thousand vehicles will save over 1,000 pounds.
And next month
we will abolish vehicle excise duty on all tractors. Transport
spending is set to rise by 20 per cent a year over the next three years,
as we take forward our ten year plan of £180 billion private and
public investment. In November
1999 I announced the Government's new approach to the fuel escalator,
first introduced by the previous Government in 1993, and which by 2010
will have secured a reduction in carbon dioxide pollution of one to
two and a half million tonnes. As I stated
in the Pre-Budget Report: this year we will not proceed with the annual
inflation rise in petrol tax that has been the norm on Budget day.
After consultation
on my Pre-Budget Report I am able to confirm further changes.
In addition
to the 1 pence cut in ultra low sulphur petrol last October,
the duty on ultra low sulphur petrol will be further cut by 2 pence
litre. To make sure
all motorists can benefit from this 2 pence cut I will extend it
to unleaded petrol until June 14th: when the industry says ultra
low sulphur petrol will be 100 per cent available. The 2 pence
cut for both ultra low sulphur and unleaded petrol will take effect
at 6 pm tonight. Lead replacement
petrol will also be cut - by a further 2 pence per litre.
And because
it is right to maintain the proper balance in the tax treatment of petrol
and diesel I propose to match the cut in low sulphur petrol with
a cut in excise duties in ultra low sulphur diesel for all diesel
users of 3 pence a litre, to take effect from 6.00 pm this evening.
The Pre-Budget
Report launched the green fuel challenge: with industry invited to submit
plans for new, more environmentally friendly fuels. I can announce that
duty will be cut radically on alternative fuels - a further 6 pence
per kilogramme duty cut on road fuel gases with effect from 6.00 pm tonight
and from next April a 20 pence duty cut for bio-diesel. To allow
this new industry to plan ahead, duty on road fuel gases will be frozen
in real terms until 2004. We cannot
achieve the Kyoto targets and our goal of cutting carbon dioxide emissions
by 20 per cent without the climate change levy which, with April's
simultaneous cut in employers national insurance, brings no additional
revenues to Government but which will cut carbon emissions by 5 million
tonnes by 2010. To reward
businesses investing in energy saving improvements, the Government is
publishing this month the list of technologies that will qualify for 100 per
cent tax relief and later this year we will launch a green technology
challenge offering this 100 per cent tax relief to companies investing
in the next generation of environmental technologies. As previously announced, the landfill tax will rise from 11 pounds per tonne to 12 pounds per tonne.
I turn to
the other excise duties. Last year
I froze duties on spirits. This year
an inflation rise would push the price of whisky up by 11 pence a
bottle. Because of
the competitive position of the industry I will this year continue to
freeze duty on whisky and on all spirits. And this year
I propose to go further and freeze duty on wine and on beer.
Beyond the
normal inflation rise of 6 pence, I will not go ahead with any real terms
rise in cigarette taxes. Following
our consultation with the betting and gaming industry over the impact
of internet trading, I have decided from January 1st to abolish betting
duty which has been in existence ever since betting shops were legalised.
I have agreed
that the tax on bookmakers' gross profits will be 15 per cent, which
the leading bookmakers have agreed not to pass on to their customers.
So by January 1st no one will have to pay a tax on their bets.
For inheritance
tax I propose to raise the allowance, so that no tax will be charged on
estates up to almost a quarter of a million pounds, a threshold of 242,000.
96 per cent of estates will pay no tax. I turn to
tax and benefit policy for families. A policy that
puts families first in the tax and benefit system insists that -
as the Beveridge Report said in 1942 - nothing should be done
to remove from parents the responsibility of maintaining their children
but it is in the national interest to help parents discharge their responsibility
properly. Our vision of the future of the tax system for families with
children is to support all families; to give most help at the time they
need it most; and to give more help to the families who need it most.
So freed of poverty, every child has the best start in life. And consistent
with our support for independent taxation of individual income, our vision
for the integration of the tax and benefit system for families is that
support should be based on family income, the basis of the new integrated
child credit. By 1997 support
for children had fallen in real terms by 6 per cent since 1979 as
child benefit was frozen; there was no recognition at all of the needs
of children in the tax system; as a result families with children had
incomes 30 per cent lower than families without children; and child
poverty had trebled. So first we
made radical improvements in child benefit which is paid to all 7.5 million
families with children. Child benefit
in 1997 was only eleven pounds five pence a week, or 575 pounds a
year. From April
child benefit will be fifteen pounds fifty a week, 806 pounds
a year. But of course
we realise that fifteen pounds fifty is too small a recognition of family
needs for most families and that it is totally wrong if the tax system
contains no allowance for the needs and costs of bringing up children.
So in addition
to child benefit the new children's tax credit is being introduced on
April 6th. And after
consultation I have decided that our new children's tax credit will be
paid not at eight pounds fifty a week or 442 pounds a year - as originally
proposed - but it will be paid at 10 pounds a week, 520 pounds
a year. For families
on average earnings this is worth more than a two and a half pence cut
in the basic rate of income tax. With the children's
tax credit five million families who received only eleven pounds
a week in 1997 for the first child now receive up to twenty five pounds
fifty a week, an increase from 575 pounds a year to one thousand
three hundred and twenty pounds per family. With this
major change in our tax system, financial support for families with children
has never been higher. We know also
that greatest help should be there when children are youngest; the time
when family income tends to fall as family costs rise. We can do
more to help mothers and fathers balance work and family responsibilities.
Indeed, we
want to make it easier for mothers to make the choice to stay at home
after their child is born and for much longer than previously.
I can announce that following the maternity review set up in last year's Budget under the leadership of the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, maternity pay which is 60 pounds will be increased in successive stages to 75 pounds next year and the year after to 100 pounds a week, as big a rise in two years as in the previous forty.
We will also
legislate so that, at the same time as the 100 pounds is introduced,
the statutory obligation to maternity pay will be raised from 18 weeks
to 26 weeks. And at a cost of 30 million pounds I will extend the help small and medium sized employers receive for administering the scheme.
Parents who
adopt will for the first time receive similar benefits. And we will
introduce two weeks paid paternity leave, set at the same level of
100 pounds, paid for by the Government, with further details of this
and other measures to be announced by the Secretary of State for Trade
and Industry. For the first
year of a child's life, I propose a further innovation. From April
next year for families with new-born children, the children's tax credit
will be set at an even higher level and paid up the income scale to all
households where the main earner earns up to 50,000 pounds a year.
I propose
to set this children's credit at over 1,000 pounds a year, worth
20 pounds a week. And I will
ensure that this 1000 pounds baby credit will be continued and will
be paid to the mother when the new integrated child credit comes in, in
2003. So to summarise
these changes: families receiving the higher children's credit and maternity
pay will be up to two thousand two hundred and forty pounds better off.
Our ambition
for Britain is that every child has the best start in life. When we came
into power, one child in every three in our country was in poverty. While
child benefit starts at fifteen pounds fifty for all families, the maximum
rate of support for children will go as high as 51 pounds a week,
a rise of 23 pounds a week since 1997. The income support child credit
will rise by one pound fifty a week, the Sure Start maternity grant will
be set at 500 pounds, helping to take more than 1.2 million
children out of poverty this Parliament as we work to cut child poverty
in half by 2010 on the road to its abolition. For the sake
of every family in the country we must and will do more to fight drugs.
For too long in too many communities we have fought a war against drugs
which drugs have won so I have a further spending announcement. Next week
the Home Secretary working with the Minister for the Cabinet Office will
announce a new three year budget of over 200 million pounds. To every
one of the country's 350 partnerships against crime and disorder,
direct payments averaging half a million pounds and up to one million
pounds will be made straight to police commanders and anti drugs leaders.
Similar funds will be available for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
This war against
drugs will never be won by Government alone but can only be won neighbourhood
by neighbourhood across the country, so further resources will be announced
to support a new anti drugs campaign involving prominent figures from
the world of business and sports to mobilise communities against drugs.
Mr Deputy
Speaker I come to the next set of budget judgements. Our success
in cutting debt and unemployment and rising economic growth have permitted
us - while locking in our tough fiscal stance - to release four billions
a year more for our priorities. And after
the decisions already announced I can still go further. The Government
could choose to pay off more debt, but we have already paid off 34 billion
pounds this year. We could choose
to repeat the pattern of Budgets at this stage of the Parliament and make
tax cuts that are unaffordable in the long term. But it is
right to chose the prudent course for Britain. Let me tell
the House what the Government has decided. For savers,
as I announced in November, the Government is extending the tax reliefs
for individual savings accounts. 9 million new accounts were opened
in the first year, with 48 billion pounds now being saved. Because
of the high number of ISAs, tax reliefs for savers will by 2006 exceed
projected tax relief for PEPS and TESSAS by 800 million pounds a
year, tax incentives for savings to total 3 billion pounds. We wish
to see more ISAS and more tax free saving, so for the next five years
up to 7,000 pounds a year of savings can generate income and capital
gains that will both be tax free. In this Budget I want to do more to
cut tax for all savers, including pensioners. For pensioners
we have already announced that from April we will raise pensions well
above inflation, indeed above earnings, by 5 pounds a week for single
pensioners and 8 pounds for couples and next year by 3 pounds
and 4.80 pounds We will retain
the winter allowance and the free TV licence for the over 75s that
we introduced and the Christmas bonus. Detailed announcements will be
made in this year's social security uprating statement. Since November,
we have been consulting on our new pension credit, to be introduced in
2003. Pensioner couples with incomes below 200 pounds and single pensioners
with incomes below 135 pounds a week, many millions of pensioners, will
receive the new pension credit. It will rise in line with earnings every
year and in this way, it will give recipients more than even the earnings
link in the basic state pension would give them. In this Budget I have decided that from 2003 when the pension credit is introduced pensioners' tax allowances will be linked not just to prices but to earnings. And I will do more on tax for savers, pensioners and working families. To achieve our goal
of full employment and reward hard work I have previously cut the basic
rate of income tax and introduced a 10 pence tax rate. And for
national insurance we announced and legislated in 1999 upper and lower
earnings limits of 575 pounds a week and 87 pounds a week respectively
for the coming year, taking three hundred thousand men and women
out of tax altogether, in all a national insurance cut of 590 million
pounds this coming year. So to reward
savers, pensioners and hard working families, my aim now and in the next
Parliament is to ensure that more of savers', pensioners' and working
people's income, now taxed at the 22 pence rate, should be taxed
at the lower 10 pence rate. And I propose
to make a start today with a one billion pounds a year tax cut: instead
of the first one thousand five hundred and twenty pounds of
taxable income at 10 pence rather than 22 pence, the first one
thousand eight hundred and eighty pounds of the taxable income of
every taxpayer in the country will be taxed at the lower 10 pence
rate. A measure
which will benefit 25 million taxpayers. And cutting
income tax by extending the 10 pence band shows our intention for the
next Parliament too: that all those who work hard and save for their retirement
will find that more of their income, taxed at 22 pence today, should
be taxed at the lower 10 pence rate. Seven and
a half million pensioners will now pay no tax or tax at just the 10 pence
rate, 70 per cent of all pensioners in the country. Taking into
account the direct tax and benefit changes in this Budget, and changes
coming in this year, households will be on average 240 pounds a year,
over 4 pounds a week better off after inflation. With the new
children's tax credit now paid from April the direct tax burden for the
average family falls from 21 per cent in 1997 to 18 per cent,
the lowest level for thirty years. I said that
our long term goals for Britain are full employment, high productivity,
strong public services, tackling child poverty and opportunity for all.
Now having
made this tax cut for work and savings, and locked in our fiscal tightening,
our economic strength allows us to release over the next three years
a further two billion pounds in total. There is a
choice. I have had representations from some for billions in further tax
cuts. But our priority has been and is Britain's public services. So we
will not cut investment but raise it. We will increase spending not by
3.4 per cent a year as we planned by 2003-4 but by 3.7 per cent
a year. I can give
more detailed figures for the benefit of the House. To cut spending
growth from 3.7 per cent to two and a quarter per cent a year,
as has been proposed, would mean, if started now, annual cuts rising above
16 billions a year by 2003-4; and even if started next April cuts of 10.1 billion
pounds a year by 2003-4. So I have
rejected this course for Britain's future not only because such deep cuts
would move us from our long term goals, and put hospitals and schools
at risk, but also because Britain must not repeat the short-termist mistakes
of the 1980s - unfunded, unaffordable tax cuts, higher interest rates,
cuts in necessary investment, with no fiscal rules. Mr Deputy
Speaker we will not return to boom and bust. Within our
tough fiscal rules, education spending is already set to rise by 5.2 per
cent a year even after inflation. I now propose
to increase substantially the sum of current and capital money paid to
every school and directly to every head teacher to allow them to make
their own decisions as they meet the nation's educational targets.
Head-teachers
of every primary school will receive not 10,000 pounds as planned
but 13,000 pounds with the larger primary schools receiving not 50,000 pounds
but 63,000 pounds. And the head-teacher
of each secondary school will receive for the smaller schools not 57,000 pounds
but 68,000 pounds and the larger schools a payment of not 92,000 pounds
but 115,000 pounds. And these
payments will not be made for just one year, but for every year through
to 2004. As a result
of our spending review, cash spending on the NHS is rising by 50 per
cent over five years. Today we add to it. There is a strong case
for extra capital investment in equipment, new scanners and renovating
old Nightingale wards, with money going direct to each hospital trust,
and a case for more primary care money going direct to local GP surgeries.
I am not however
able to give 100,000 pounds to each of the 200 acute hospital
trusts. Instead from
April, for work on Nightingale wards and new investment, acute hospital
trusts will receive as a result of this Budget every year for the next
three years extra money of between half a million pounds and
a million pounds. Further announcements
including cash for GP trusts will follow, as well as allocations
by the Scottish and Welsh administrations. So I have
one final announcement. The Secretary
of State for Health wishes to recruit an extra 20,000 more nurses by 2004.
Next week he will announce three year allocations from a new 135 million
pounds fund for recruitment of front-line staff. And next week
also the Secretary of State for Education will announce his three year
allocations from a new 200 million pound fund for retention, and
recruitment of extra teachers. In total over
the next three years one billion pounds more to our hospitals
and one billion more to our schools - money that we could not provide
if we made irresponsible tax cuts. We have made
our choice: - more investment
not less; - stability
the foundation; - tax cuts
we can afford; - schools
and hospitals first. And I commend
this Budget to this House. |
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