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Autumn Budget 2024 recap as Spring Statement due to be announced

As Mancunian Matters awaits the Spring Statement announcement today, we’ve put together a recap of 2024’s Autumn Budget.

Announced in October, this was Labour’s first budget in 14 years, and here were the key takeaways:

Taxes 

Taxes would be raised by £40bn to fund the NHS and other public services.

National Insurance contributions for employers would increase to 15% from April 2025.

Basic rate on capital gains tax on profits from selling shares would increase:

  • Lower rate from 10% to 18%
  • Higher rate from 20% to 24%

Inheritance tax freeze extended to 2030:

  • The first £325,000 can be inherited tax-free
  • £500,000 for direct descendents
  • £1m for a surviving spouse or civil partner

Stamp duty surcharge for second homes in England and Northern Ireland would go up from 3% to 5%.

Wages, benefits, pensions

£240m in funding for health and employment services for people with disabilities and long-term illness.

Legal minimum wage increase:

  • 6.7% rise for 18-20s: from £8.60 to £10
  • 16.3% for over-21s: from £11.44 to £12.21 per hour

4.1% increase for basic and state pension payments.

Eligibility broadened for carer allowance, meaning the maximum earnings threshold would rise from £151 to £195 a week.

Transport

The £2 cap on bus fares would not increase for Greater Manchester or London, but would rise to £3 for the rest of England.

A commitment to the much overdue Transpennine rail upgrade between York and Manchester.

An extra £500m to repair potholes in England.

A 5p cut in fuel duty extended until April 2026.

Public services

Day-to-day spending on NHS and education would rise by 4.7%, facilitating 40,000 extra hospital appointments and procedures, new hospital beds, rebuilding 500 state schools and investment in SEND.

Defence spending would rise by £2.9bn.

The Home Office budget would shrink this financial year by 3.1% followed by another 3.3% next year from assumed savings from the asylum system.

£1.3bn extra funding for local councils.

Housing

The affordable homes budget would receive an extra £500m.

Social housing would see changes from increasing rents above inflation and discounts for the right to Buy scheme reduced.

Economy

Public finances would be in surplus by 2027-2028 financial year, reaching stability two years earlier than planned.

The Office for Budget Responsibility predicted UK economy growth from 1.1% in 2024, to 2% this year, and 1.8% in 2026.

OBR also predicted UK borrowing would increase by an average of £32.3bn over the next five years due to budget policies.

Other

£11.8bn was allocated to compensate victims of the infected blood scandal.

£1.8bn was allocated for wrongly prosecuted Post Office sub-postmasters.

Extra spending in England would mean:

  • An extra £3.4bn for Scotland
  • £1.7bn for Wales
  • £1.5bn for Northern Ireland

All government departments would need to reduce their budgets by 2% next year through innovative technology such as AI.

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