2023-03-16

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

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