Figuring out the twists and turns of the newly announced spring budget is challenging. Filled with technical jargon and late term party promises, it can be hard to get a handle on what impacts we can expect for the individual and businesses. Verallo have got you covered with a breakdown of the report to help you understand what is in store for the coming years.
With the UK entering a technical recession at the tail end of 2023 and a general election on the cards this year, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt was under pressure to deliver a Spring Budget that demonstrated fiscal responsibility and generosity. Dubbing the fiscal statement a ‘Budget for long-term growth”, Hunt focused his speech on delivering tax breaks, boosting investment, and tackling unfairness in the UK tax system.
One of the Chancellor’s most significant announcements was a 2p cut to National Insurance contributions (NICs) in April where workers will see their rates fall by four percentage points in less than six months. Other personal measures included extending the freeze and 5p cut on fuel duty for a further 12 months, cutting the higher capital gains tax (CGT) rate on residential property sales, and reforming the high-income child benefit charge (HICBC) to increase the threshold and make the system fairer for single-earner households.
For businesses, Hunt promised enhanced funding for ‘high-growth industries’ and focused support for the creative sector. The VAT threshold will also rise from £85,000 to £90,000 in April. To pay for these changes, the Chancellor announced several revenue-raising initiatives, such as replacing the current tax regime for non-domiciled individuals (non-doms), a new levy on vaping products and an extension of the windfall tax levy on oil and gas companies. Hunt also abolished the furnished holiday lettings relief, claiming it will raise capital and improve the availability of long-term rental properties.
In his Spring Budget speech, Jeremy Hunt said he had set out a plan to deliver long-term growth for the UK that will build a high-wage, high-skill economy with a path to more investment, more jobs, more productive public services, and lower taxes.
However, given the limited wiggle room stated from the Office of Budget Responsibility’s (OBR) economic report, the Chancellor’s plans for a pre-election Budget tax giveaway had to be predictably reined in. According to the OBR, the Chancellor had around £9bn to budget, compared to £13bn in November, which the OBR described as “a tiny fraction of the risks around any forecast”.
The OBR report said the economy “has emerged from the twin global shocks of the pandemic and Russian invasion of Ukraine into a period of declining inflation but stagnating output”. With inflation receding more quickly than expected and markets expecting a sharper decline in interest rates later this year, this “should enable a faster recovery in living standards from last financial year’s record decline”. However, the medium-term economic outlook “remains challenging”.
When summarising the UK economy, the OBR’s report takes into account the changes made to national spending and the tax system in the accompanying Spring Budget. The OBR’s report shows that, post pandemic, a cohesive plan to get back to growth is sorely needed.
GDP grew by just 0.1% in 2023, and the OBR expects the economy to grow by 0.8% in 2024 as interest rates fall and real household incomes recover. The GDP is forecast to rise by 7.6% by 2028. When the Chancellor delivered the Autumn Statement, the OBR said growth was expected at 0.7% in 2024, 1.4% in 2025, and 1.9% in 2026, meaning the expected GDP growth has been upgraded.
In its report alongside the 2024 Spring Budget, the OBR forecasts that underlying debt will fall as a share of the economy to 92.9% in 2028/29 and that headline debt will fall as a percentage of GDP every year from 2024/25.
In November, the OBR forecast that living standards, as measured by real household disposable income (RHDI) per person, would fall by 1.5% in 2024, and then increase by an average of 1.5% between 2025 and 2028.
In the March Spring Budget it said that living standards are now expected to recover more quickly than previously predicted and grow by around 1% a year. In addition, it now expects household disposable income per person to recover its pre-pandemic peak by 2026, two years earlier than in the November forecast.
“The 2 pence cut to the main rates of NICs announced in this Budget alone is expected to directly boost real household incomes by 0.5%. This adds to a boost of similar size from the NICs cut announced in the Autumn Statement,” the report said.
However, unemployment is now expected to peak at 4.5% which represents 1.6 million people in the last quarter of 2024, as the OBR expects subdued economic growth and increasing spare capacity in the economy. It is then forecast to decline to 4.1% by 2028.
The UK economy went into a technical recession at the end of 2023 after shrinking for six months. However, Bank of England (BoE) Governor Andrew Bailey noted “distinct signs of an upturn” in February, saying the recession “may already be over”.
However, even if the economy is now growing, many households are still struggling financially after two years of rising prices. Supply chain disruption due to the pandemic was not the only cause of inflation. Food and energy prices rose sharply during 2022 and 2023 due to global disruptions, and the effects of the war in Ukraine lifted the input costs of food producers. These pressures eased during the second half of 2023 and in early 2024 but are not gone entirely.
Furthermore, the cost of living increased sharply across the UK during 2021 and 2022, with the annual rate of inflation peaking in October 2022 at 11.1% which marked a 41-year high.
Annual inflation is currently at 4%, unchanged since December. Inflation is expected to continue to fall in 2024, though more gradually than in 2023, due to lower energy prices and reduced inflation in consumer goods and food. The OBR expects inflation to average 1.4% in the final quarter of 2024 but with the caveat of the Chancellor saying:
“The battle against inflation is still not over…Of course, interest rates remain high as we bring down inflation. But because of the progress we’ve made, because we are delivering on the Prime Minister’s economic priorities, we can now help families not just with temporary cost of living support but with permanent cuts in taxation. We do this to give much needed help in challenging times. Lower tax means higher growth. And higher growth means more opportunity more prosperity, and more funding or precious public services…With the pandemic behind us, we must once again be responsible and build up our resilience to future shocks. That means bringing down borrowing so we can start to reduce our debt.”
To try and get the inflation rate back to its 2% target, the BoE increased interest rates at 14 consecutive policy meetings from 0.1% in December 2021 to 5.25% in August 2023, and they have remained unchanged since. Pressure is now on the central bank to cut interest rates. However, February’s monetary report said that as a result of inflation persistence, “monetary policy will need to remain restrictive for sufficiently long to return inflation to the 2% target sustainably in the medium term”, meaning a cut is not likely to happen at the next announcement on 21 March 2024.
Andrew Bailey has repeatedly said rates will remain as they are for some time, but economists and the financial markets are expecting a change in approach by June. The OBR confirmed that it expects to see the Bank Rate fall to 4.2% in the final quarter of 2024 in order to help stimulate economic growth.
The 2024 Spring Budget included support that was aimed at helping poorer families with the introduction of changes such as a lower personal tax burden, expanded Universal Credit with more generous work allowances, and frozen energy duty rates to curb rising fuel costs.
Additionally, the Budget provided targeted support through improved access to affordable childcare and an emergency fund for families in immediate financial distress, easing pressure on household budgets. Here are the key measures at a glance:
Since the Autumn Statement, the main rate of employee National Insurance will fall again by a further 2p from 10% to 8% in April. This means employee NICs will have dropped by one-third in less than six months and the average worker on £35,400 will receive a tax cut of over £900 compared to last year.
Sole traders and people in business partnerships will also see a lower tax burden in April. Following a 1 percentage point cut in the Autumn Statement, the main rate of Class 4 NICs for the self-employed will fall by a further 2 percentage points from 8% to 6% from April. Bottom line, when combined with scrapping the requirement to pay Class 2 NICs, this will save the average self-employed person earning £28,000 over £650 a year.
Following calls to overhaul the outdated tax rules for non-UK domiciled individuals, Hunt announced that the non-dom regime will soon be replaced by a simpler system. The new regime will give new arrivals access to a more generous scheme for the first four years they live in the UK. After that, non-doms will be required to pay taxes at the same rate as everyone else. This is expected to raise £2.7bn a year by 2029.
The Government also introduced changes to make the High-Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) fairer for single-income families. Introducing the changes the Chancellor said: “The way we treat child benefit in the tax system is confusing and unfair… And when it works, it’s good for children, it’s good for parents, and it’s good for the economy because it helps people into work.”
Under the current rules, a household with one parent earning £50,000 or more will see a reduction in their child benefit entitlement, while a household with two parents earning £49,000 each will receive the full child benefit. To even the playing field, HICBC will be administered on a household rather than an individual basis by April 2026, with a consultation in due course.
Until then, around half a million working families will benefit from an increase in the HICBC threshold from £50,000 to £60,000, with the threshold at which child benefit is fully repaid increasing to £80,000. This is effective from April 2024. According to the Government, this will save the average family around £1,260 a year. This change means basic rate taxpayers will no longer have to file self-assessment returns each year purely to pay the HICBC.
To channel more investment into UK equities, the UK ISA will allow individuals an additional £5,000 per year tax-free, on top of the existing ISA allowance, which is currently £20,000 per year, to invest in UK-focused assets. Further encouraging a culture of saving by increasing the options open to individuals, the British Savings Bonds, delivered through National Savings and Investments, will offer a guaranteed interest rate fixed for three years. Unfortunately, there is little information and no timetable available on this but expect more to come following government consultation.
The Government has also promised to bring forward legislation to clarify the position on fractional share contracts, which was previously promised in the Autumn Statement. According to the Red Book, this should be completed by the end of the summer and will further support savers investing in a diverse range of investment types.
The higher rate of capital gains tax (CGT) on residential property will be cut from 28% to 24% from April 2024. According to Hunt, this move is set to generate revenue for the Treasury by firing up the housing market and encouraging more residential property disposals.
The most vulnerable families will receive targeted support through a £500m extension of the Household Support Fund for an additional six months to September 2024. Combined with the Government’s decision to scrap the £90 administration fee for Debt Relief, this will allow local authorities to better support low-income residents with the cost of essentials. In an effort to help households struggling with problem debts, the maximum period for Universal Credit budgeting advances is also doubling to 24 months from December 2024.
The main fuel duty rates will now remain frozen until March 2025 and the temporary 5p cut to the duty has also been extended. The Government estimates these measures will save car drivers around £50 in 2024/25 and £250 since the 5p cut was introduced, resulting in a potential total £5bn tax cut across the nation. Businesses that rely heavily on transportation, such as hauliers and delivery firms, will also welcome this continued relief amid high fuel costs.
The Spring Budget was lighter on pro-business headline announcements than its autumnal counterpart. However, it still contained targeted support for Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), high-growth companies and key industries like manufacturing, creative sectors and the life sciences.
The upcoming increases in the VAT threshold and extension of the Recovery Loan Scheme will be particularly beneficial for smaller firms. Making full expensing permanent remains the current Government’s flagship pro-investment tax policy. Businesses are currently awaiting more details on how this will be legislated. With inflation still elevated and a general election due this year, the Chancellor had to carefully balance support for businesses and the general public, with policies like extending fuel duty relief appealing to both.
In a boost for small businesses, the VAT registration threshold will increase from £85,000 to £90,000 from 1 April 2024, the first increase in seven years. The Chancellor said this would “reduce the administrative and financial impact” for SMEs, explaining it will bring approximately 28,000 small businesses out of collecting, reporting and paying VAT altogether.
In a move to make the property market fairer for renters, the Furnished Holiday Lettings (FHL) regime will be abolished from April 2025. The change aims to increase long-term rental options for locals and help fund national insurance cuts. It is estimated that the change will raise around £300m from landlords who benefited from the furnished holiday lettings (FHL) scheme.
Properties meeting the qualifying tests for FHLs are taxed under special rules and owners of such properties can access specific tax advantages not available for other lettings. These include:
Hunt argued that this measure would help alleviate housing strain in coastal areas where landlords are converting properties into short-term holiday lets to the detriment of local populations.
Recognising the vital role of SMEs in the economy, the Spring Budget built on the support measures from the Autumn Statement. In addition to raising the VAT threshold, key announcements include:
The Spring Budget contained several measures focused on encouraging business investment and growth:
The Spring Budget reaffirmed the Government’s commitment to making the UK a global leader in science and innovation. Building on the £750m R&D package announced in the 2023 Autumn Statement, the Chancellor unveiled several new measures:
Hunt also used the Budget to build on a wider Government strategy to support key sectors, including creative industries, advanced manufacturing, green industries, digital technology and AI, and life sciences, to drive economic growth and innovation.
Hunt described the UK as Europe’s “largest film and TV production centre” and announced support of more than £1bn in additional tax relief over five years for the £125bn creative industry, which employs 2.4 million people in the UK.
Measures included:
The information included here is based upon our understanding of the Chancellor’s 2024 Spring Budget, in respect of which specific implementation details may change when the final legislation and supporting documentation are published.
To find out more about how yesterday’s Budget will impact you and your business, call us on 0203 912 9933, or email info@verallo.com.