Budget 2021: Key points at-a-glance
- Published
Chancellor Rishi Sunak has unveiled the contents of his Budget in the House of Commons.
Setting out the government's tax and spending plans for the year ahead, he announced new measures to help business and jobs through the pandemic and to support the UK's long-term economic recovery and a series of tax-raising plans to help rebalance the public finances.
Here is a summary of the main points.
Coronavirus support
Furlough to be extended until the end of September
Government to continue paying 80% of employees' wages for hours they cannot work
Employers to be asked to contribute 10% in July and 20% in August and September
Support for the self-employed also to be extended until September
600,000 more self-employed people will be eligible for help as access to grants is widened
£20 weekly uplift in Universal Credit worth £1,000 a year to be extended for another six months
Working Tax Credit claimants will get £500 one-off payment
Minimum wage to increase to £8.91 an hour from April
State of the economy and public finances
UK economy shrank by 10% in 2020
Economy forecast to rebound in 2021, with predicted annual growth of 4% this year
Economy forecast to return to pre-Covid levels by middle of 2022, with growth of 7.3% next year
700,000 people have lost their jobs since pandemic began
Unemployment expected to peak at 6.5% next year, lower than 11.9% previously predicted
UK to borrow a peacetime record of £355bn this year.
Borrowing to total £234bn in 2021-22
Taxation
No changes to rates of income tax, national insurance or VAT
Tax-free personal allowance to be frozen at £12,570 from April 2021 levels to 2026
Higher rate income tax threshold to be frozen at £50,270 from April 2021 levels to 2026
Corporation tax on company profits above £250,000 to rise from 19% to 25% in April 2023
Rate to be kept at 19% for about 1.5 million smaller companies with profits of less than £50,000
Stamp duty holiday on house purchases in England and Northern Ireland extended to 30 June
No tax charged on sales of less than £500,000
Inheritance tax thresholds, pensions life time allowances and annual capital gains tax exemptions to be frozen at 2020-2021 levels until 2025-26
Health and education
£1.65bn to support the UK's vaccination rollout and £50m to boost the UK's vaccine testing capability
£19m for domestic violence programmes, funding network of respite rooms for homeless women
£40m of new funding for victims of 1960s Thalidomide scandal and lifetime support guarantee
£10m to support armed forces veterans with mental health needs
The arts and sport
Nearly £400m to help arts venues in England, including museums and galleries, re-open
£300m recovery package for professional sport and £25m for grassroots football
£1.2m to help stage delayed Women's Euros football tournament in England in 2022
Business, digital and science
Tax breaks for firms to "unlock" £20bn worth of business investment
Firms will be able "deduct" investment costs from tax bills, reducing taxable profits by 130%
Incentives for firms to take on apprentices to rise to £3,000 and £126m for traineeships
Lower VAT rate for hospitality firms to be maintained at 5% rate until September
Interim 12.5% rate will then apply for the following six months
Business rates holiday for firms in England to continue until June with 75% discount after that
£5bn in Restart grants for shops and other businesses in England forced to close
£6,000 per premises for non-essential outlets due to re-open in April and £18,000 for gyms, personal care providers and other hospitality and leisure businesses
New visa scheme to help start-ups and rapidly growing tech firms source talent from overseas
Contactless payment limit will rise to £100 later this year
Alcohol, tobacco and fuel
All alcohol duties to be frozen for second year running
No extra tax on spirits, wine, cider or beer
Fuel duty to be frozen for eleventh consecutive year
Tobacco duties rose in November but no further rise in this Budget
Environment, transport, infrastructure and housing
New UK Infrastructure Bank to be set up in Leeds
It will have £12bn in capital, with aim of funding £40bn worth of public and private projects
£15bn in green bonds, including for retail investors, to help finance the transition to net zero by 2050
Nations and regions
£1.2bn in funding for the Scottish government, £740m for the Welsh government and £410m for the Northern Ireland executive
750 UK civil servants to be relocated to new Treasury campus in Darlington
£1bn fund to promote regeneration in a further 45 English towns, including Middlesbrough, Preston, Swindon, Bournemouth, Newark, West Bromwich and Ipswich
£150m for community groups to take over pubs at risk of closure
First eight sites announced for freeports in England: East Midlands Airport, Felixstowe and Harwich, Humber, Liverpool City Region, Plymouth, Solent, Thames and Teesside
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- Published3 March 2021
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