Welcome to our 2008 Budget
Summary
Summary of
key proposals
- The main rate of corporation tax will fall from 30%
to 28% from April 2008 and taxes for small companies
will be simplified.
- The 18% flat rate of capital gains tax, and a 10% rate
for the first £1 million of lifetime gains – known
as entrepreneur’s relief – was confirmed
as taking effect from 6 April 2008.
- The £30,000 levy on long-term non-domiciles to
pay their tax on a remittance basis was confirmed as
taking effect from 6 April 2008.
- The 2p rise in fuel duty expected in April will be
postponed until October 2008.
- There will be major reform of vehicle excise
duty from 2009, with new bands created as an incentive
to manufacturers to produce and drivers to buy the cleanest
cars
- Alongside the winter fuel payment, there will be an
additional £100 payment to over-80s households
and £50 for over-60s households in 2008-09
- Child benefit for the first child will rise to £20
a week from April 2009, a year earlier than originally
planned.
Previous
announcements
The pre-budget report in October 2007 laid the foundation
for the main budget, although several of the proposed changes
have since undergone substantial change, notably capital
gains tax (CGT) and non-domicile measures.
Below is a reminder of some of the main pre-budget measures
proposed in October 2007:
- The nil rate band of inheritance tax (currently £300,000)
will become transferable so that the estate of a surviving
spouse or civil partner can make use of any unused inheritance
tax nil rate band of the deceased spouse or partner.
- An 18% flat rate of capital gains tax will be introduced
from 6 April 2008 and taper relief and the indexation
allowance will be withdrawn from the same date. The annual
personal allowance will remain (currently £9,200).
- Non-domiciled individuals who have been UK tax resident
for seven years or more will only be able to use the
remittance basis for paying tax on their overseas income
if they pay an additional charge of £30,000 a year.
Years of residence before 6 April 2008 will be taken
into account.
- It was proposed to introduce legislation in the 2008-09
financial year to address “income shifting”,
in that the income of one person is diverted to a second
person, subject to a lower rate, to gain a tax advantage.
- The fuel charge multiplier for employees’ “free
fuel” will rise by £2,500 to £16,900
from 6 April 2008. This is the sum used as the basis
for calculating the taxable value for fuel provided by
an employer for private mileage in a company car.
- Renovations and alterations to residential property
empty for at least two years will be eligible for a reduced
rate of VAT of 5% from 1 January 2008. Previously, property
had to be empty for a minimum of three years.
The
economy
Mr Darling began with a summary of the world economy.
He said that turbulence in financial markets, starting
in the United States, had spread globally, posing a major
risk to the world economy.
But he said that the UK economy would continue to grow
and had the resilience to withstand global shocks. Key
points were:
- the economy grew by 3% last year but Mr Darling predicted
that this would fall to between 1.75-2.25% this year,
rising to between 2.25-2.75% in 2009
- inflation is set to stay steady and Mr Darling would
be writing to the governor of the Bank of England to
confirm the inflation target as 2%
- borrowing next year will rise to £43bn, falling
to £23bn by 2012-13.
Personal
tax
It had already been announced that the top-rate income
tax threshold will rise to £43,000 from 6th April
2009.
The 10% starting rate is abolished from April 2008, with
the basic rate falling from 22% to 20% at the same time.
Mr Darling said that new income tax allowances for people
aged 65 and older would take 600,000 pensioners out of
income tax. By April 2011, no pensioner aged 75 or over
will pay any tax until their income reaches £10,000
a year.
The unusually early pre-Budget report in 2007 meant that
changes to the basic personal allowance and starting point
for national insurance contributions (NICs) for 2008-09
were not announced until 18 October.
Income
tax – personal and age-related allowances
2008/09 |
£ |
|
|
Personal allowance (age under 65) |
5,435 |
Personal allowance (age 65-74) |
9,030 |
Personal allowance (age 75 and over) |
9,180 |
Married couple’s allowance* (aged less than
75 and born before 6 April 1935) |
6,535 |
Married couple’s allowance* (age 75 and
over) |
6,625 |
Married couple’s allowance* (minimum amount) |
2,540 |
Age allowances income limit |
21,800 |
Blind person’s allowance |
1,800 |
The main rates of employers’, employees’ and
Class 4 NICs will remain unchanged. The flat rate of NICs
for the self-employed will rise to £2.30 per week
while the upper earnings limit for national insurance will
rise from £670 to £770.
Benefits
and working families
Mr Darling continued the previous years’ Budget
emphasis on eradicating child poverty by 2020. He said
that a further £1.9bn would be invested over the
next three years to relieve child poverty.
The weekly rate of child benefit for the eldest child
will rise to £20 from April 2009, a year earlier
than had already been announced.
Mr Darling also announced that the child element of Child
Tax Credit will rise by £50 a year from April 2009.
This element is already rising by £150 a year to £2,080
from April 2008.
He said that a key element of eradicating child poverty
was to encourage parents into work. Measures to achieve
this include disregarding child benefit in calculating
income for housing and council tax benefit from October
2009, improving work incentives for many of the lowest-paid
families. A working family with one child, on the lowest
incomes, will gain up to £17 a week.
From late 2008, a new Employment and Support Allowance
will replace the current system of incapacity benefits
for new claimants, which will be accompanied by a new work
capability assessment from October 2008. All existing incapacity
claimants will be required to take the work capability
assessment from April 2010.
Mr Darling said he would be encouraging energy companies
to spend up to £150m to reduce the cost of paying
for fuel through pre-payment meters.
Savings
Mr Darling confirmed the reform to the Individual Savings
Accounts (ISAs) announced in 2007. From April 2008, more
than 17 million ISA savers will be able to invest
a total annual limit of £7,200 - £3,600 in
cash and £3,600 in stocks and shares.
He also announced the launch of the first Savings Gateway
accounts by 2010, a scheme designed to encourage people
on low incomes to save. The two-year accounts will be offered
by banks and building societies and at the end of the account,
the government will match money saved in the accounts,
which will be open to people on a range of benefits and
tax credits.
Pensions
and retirement
Under the government’s minimum income guarantee,
single pensioners will receive £124.05 and couples £189.35
from April 2008.
Mr Darling announced that the there would be an additional £100
payment alongside the winter fuel payment to over-80s households
and £50 for over-60s households in 2008-09. The winter
fuel payment is £300 for over-80s and £200
for over-60s.
Inheritance
tax
It had previously been announced that the inheritance
tax threshold for 2007-08 threshold would rise to £300,000.
For the tax year 2008-2009 it rises to £312,000,
in 2009-2010 to £325,000, and in 2010-2011 to £350,000.
Business
and enterprise
Mr Darling confirmed that the main rate of corporation
tax will fall from 30% to 28% from 1 April 2008. The small
companies’ rate will rise from 20% to 21%.
He emphasised the contribution of small and medium-sized
enterprises, which he said employed 13 million people,
to the UK economy and announced proposals to make it easier
for small firms to comply with legislation.
Mr Darling did not mention proposals on income shifting – a
tax minimisation arrangement common in husband and wife
and other family businesses – during his Budget speech,
but the government will introduce legislation to deal with
this in the Finance Bill 2009.
Measures to benefit businesses include a 20% increase
in funding to the Small Firms Loan Guarantee Scheme, which
supports firms that find it difficult to access conventional
finance. From April 2008, the scheme will also be open
to all small firms, rather than those that are more than
five years old.
Mr Darling said that the upper limit for an investor
under the Enterprise Investment Scheme, which provides
a range of tax reliefs for investors who subscribe for
qualifying shares in certain companies, would rise from £400,000
to £500,000 a year. There would also be a £12.5m
contribution to a capital fund for businesses run by women.
Mr Darling also announced that measures would be taken
to encourage more SMEs to benefit from public sector contracts.
An independent review would take place, with the aim of
achieving a 30 per cent target within the next five years.
Company cars
A new emissions-based approach will replace the existing
capital allowance regime for business cars, effective from
1 April 2009. Expenditure on the most polluting cars will
receive a 10% writing down allowance, with the least polluting
attracting a 20% writing down allowance.
The 100% first year capital allowances for the cleanest
cars will be extended from 31 March 2008 to 31 March 2013,
with the qualifying CO2 emissions threshold will be reduced
to 110g/km.
Company car tax rates will be increased on all but the
cleanest cars, emitting less than 135g CO2/km or less in
2010-11.
The incentive to drive fewer miles will be strengthened
by increasing the fuel benefit charges at least in line
with the Retail Prices Index from April 2009. Tax-free
mileage allowances (AMAPs) rates and thresholds will remain
at the current levels.
Capital
gains tax
Mr Darling confirmed that an 18% flat rate of capital
gains tax and a 10% rate for the first £1 million
of lifetime gains – known as entrepreneur’s
relief – would take effect from 6 April 2008. Taper
relief and indexation allowance will be abolished from
the same date.
The individual capital gains tax annual exemption is increased
from £9,200 to £9,600 from 6 April 2008.
Residence
and domicile
Key changes to proposals to residence and domicile reforms
announced in the pre-Budget Report include:
- Income and gains from offshore trusts will only be
taxed when remitted to the UK, even if they come from
UK assets.
- The annual £30,000 charge on non-domiciles resident
for more than seven of the last 10 years will not be
paid by children and should be creditable against foreign
tax.
- People with unremitted offshore income and gains of
under £2,000 are exempt from the £30,000
charge and changes in personal allowances.
- Day counting tests for residence have been amended
so that physical presence in the UK at midnight counts
as a whole day but are modified for those in the UK in
transit.
Mr Darling said that the rules in the area of residence
and domicile will not be substantially revisited for the
rest of this Parliament or the next.
Capital
allowances
Changes will be introduced to Capital Allowances for 2008/9:
- Allowances on long life assets to increase from 6%
to 10%.
- Integral fixtures to become as long life assets and
subject to 10% allowance from 2008, subject to consultation.
- Phased removal of IBAs and ABAs by 2011.
- A new annual investment allowance (AIA) of £50,000pa
spent on plant and machinery to replace first year allowances
(FYA) for all businesses.
- A payable tax credit for losses incurred on "green
technologies" - subject to consultation
- Extension of capital allowances to expenditure on building
regulations.
Housing and
mortgages
Mr Darling said that from April 2008 key workers, such
as teachers and nurses, would be able to borrow up to 50%
of the cost of a property through shared equity schemes,
instead of the current 75%. Stamp duty on shared ownership
homes will not be payable until people own 80% of the property.
He said he wanted to extend the opportunities for homebuyers
to take out long-term, fixed rate mortgages, and that these
should be more flexible, to protect them from fluctuating
interest rates.
Mr Darling said that these mortgages would help to reduce
some of the risks involved in taking out mortgages, particularly
for first time buyers and people on low incomes, and that
he would develop this further in the pre-Budget report
in the autumn.
He also announced that sites for 70,000 new homes had
been identified, in addition to 40,000 already under construction,
and that there would be money for the Housing Corporation
to build 70,000 affordable new homes each year.
Alcohol and
cigarettes
From 6pm on Budget day, cigarettes will rise in price
by 11p a packet and a packet of five cigars by 20p. The
5% VAT rate on smoking cessation products will continue
after 30 June 2008.
From Sunday 16 March, there will be an additional 4p duty
on a pint of beer, 3p on a litre of cider, 14p on a bottle
of wine and 55p on a bottle of spirits. Duty will continue
to rise on alcohol at 2% above inflation for the next four
years.
Charities
Although the basic rate of tax will be 20% in 2008-09,
Gift Aid – tax relief on donations to charities -
will be paid at a transitional rate of 22% from 2008-09
to 2010-11, providing charities with additional Gift Aid
worth around £300m over three years.
Property,
transport and the environment
Mr Darling announced that five-year carbon budgets would
be introduced, with the first set alongside Budget 2009.
In 2006, the government announced that changes to building
regulations would mean that by 2016, every new home would
be zero carbon. Mr Darling extended this to non-domestic
buildings, such as offices and shops, from 2019.
Until 2012, all new zero carbon homes up to £500,000
continue to be exempt from stamp duty, with zero-carbon
homes costing in excess of £500,000 receiving a reduction
in their stamp duty bill of £15,000.
Transport measures include a rise in fuel duty by 2p,
although this has been deferred from April to October 2008.
The main road fuel duty rates will rise by 1.84p per litre
on 1 April 2009 and by 0.5p per litre above inflation on
1 April 2010.
Mr Darling said he would also be setting aside funding
to test proposals on road pricing, to reduce congestion
and vehicle emissions.
Vehicle excise duty will rise by £5 per year, except
for cars with a CO2 emission level of 120 g/km or below,
where there will be no increase. There will be a £100
increase for cars with CO2 emission level of 226 g/km and
above.
Mr Darling said manufacturers needed to be encouraged
to reduce CO2 emissions to 110g/km by 2020. In 2009, there
would be major reform of vehicle excise duty, with the
highest rates for the most polluting cars and from 2010-11,
the lowest emission cars will pay no tax in first year.
The most polluting cars will pay a first year rate of £950
in 2010-11.
Capital allowances for business cars will encourage businesses
to choose the lowest emission vehicles for their fleets.
Mr Darling also announced that he would introduce legislation
in 2009 to introduce charges for single use carrier bags
if retailers did not take voluntary action to do so. He
said this could cut the 12bn bags used each year in the
UK by 90%. |