On 27 October, Rishi Sunak announced the Autumn Budget for 2021. Everyone had been awaiting further information on the tax increases previously announced and the expected National Wage Increase.
We will be releasing further information as soon as it is available. Please get in touch if you want to discuss any of the points in more detail and how they will affect you and your business.
Key Points of the Autumn Budget 2021
State of the economy and public finances
- Inflation in September was 3.1% and is likely to rise to average 4% over next year, OBR says
- UK economy forecast to return to pre-Covid levels by 2022
- Annual growth set to rebound by 6.5% this year, followed by 6% in 2022
- Unemployment expected to peak at 5.2% next year, lower than 11.9% previously predicted
- Wages have grown in real terms by 3.4% since February 2020
- Borrowing as a percentage of GDP is forecast to fall from 7.9% this year to 3.3% next year
- Borrowing as a percentage of GDP will then fall in the following four years to 1.5%
- Foreign aid spending projected to return to 0.7% of GDP by 2024-25
- Economy set to hit pre-Covid level at end of year
Taxation and wages
- Universal Credit taper rate will be cut by 8% no later than 1 December, bringing it down from 63% to 55% – allowing claimants to keep more of the payment
- Confirmation business rates to be retained and reformed
- A 50% business rates discount for the retail, hospitality, and leisure sectors in England in 2022-23, up to a maximum of £110,000
- Planned rise in fuel duty to be cancelled amid the highest pump prices in eight years
- Consultation on an online sales tax
- National Living Wage to increase next year by 6.6%, to £9.50 an hour
Government spending
- Whitehall departments to receive rise in overall spending, totalling £150bn over the course of this Parliament
- Funding will rise by an average of £4.6bn for Scottish Government, £2.5bn for Welsh Government, and £1.6bn for Northern Ireland Executive
- Levelling Up Fund will mean £1.7bn invested in local areas across the UK
- Government backing projects in Aberdeen, Bury, Burnley, Lewes, Clwyd South, Stoke-on-Trent, Ashton under Lyne, Doncaster, South Leicester, Sunderland, and West Leeds
- Extra £2.2bn for courts, prisons, and probation services
- Tax relief for museums and galleries will be extended for two years, to March 2024
- Core science funding to rise to £5.9bn a year by 2024-25
- £6bn of funding to help tackle NHS backlogs
- £7bn for transport projects in areas including Greater Manchester, the West Midlands, and South Yorkshire
Children and education
- Schools to get an extra £4.7bn by 2024-25
- There will be nearly £2bn of new funding to help schools and colleges to recover from the pandemic
- Schools funding to return to 2010 levels in real terms – an equivalent per pupil cash increase of more than £1,500
- £300m will be spent on a “Start for Life” parenting programmes, with an additional £170m by 2024-25 promised for childcare
- A UK-wide numeracy programme will be set-up to help improve basic maths skills among adults
- Schools cash returning to 2010 rate amid calls for more
Air travel
- Flights between airports in the UK nations will be subject to a new lower rate of Air Passenger Duty from April 2023
- Financial support for English airports to be extended for a further six months
- From April 2023, new ultra-long-haul band in Air Passenger Duty for flights of over 5,500 miles introduced
Alcohol
- Planned rise in the duty on spirits, wine, cider, and beer cancelled
- Simplification of alcohol duties will see the number of rates drop from 15 to six
- Stronger red wines, fortified wines, and high-strength ciders will see a small increase in their rates
- Rates on many lower alcohol drinks including rose wine, fruit ciders, liqueurs, lower strength beers and wines to fall
- All sparkling wines to pay the same duty as still wines of equivalent strength
- New, lower rate of duty on draught beer and cider will cut the rates by 5%
- Taxes cut on sparkling wine and draught beer
Housing
- £24bn earmarked for housing: £11.5bn for up to 180,000 affordable homes, with brownfield sites targeted for development
- 4% levy will be placed on property developers with profits over £25m rate to help create a £5bn fund to remove unsafe cladding
- £640m a year to address rough sleeping and homelessness