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PARENTS, workers and drinkers are among the winners in today’s Spring Budget – with smokers hit. The Chancellor has revealed a whole host of financial changes and updates affecting Brits in his speech in the Commons today. 1 We round up the winners and losers of this year’s Spring Budget In his second Spring Budget since becoming Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt […]

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PARENTS, workers and drinkers are among the winners in today’s Spring Budget – with smokers hit.

The Chancellor has revealed a whole host of financial changes and updates affecting Brits in his speech in the Commons today.

1

We round up the winners and losers of this year’s Spring Budget

In his second Spring Budget since becoming Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt set out the government’s financial plan for the year including payments, tax changes and policy updates.

There were also a host of updates such as the triple lock being maintained and benefits being uprated to match inflation, which were first announced in the Autumn Statement.

But, today Mr Hunt has unveiled further support for households, including tax cuts and a further freeze on fuel duty.

Some people will be happy while others may feel they have missed out.

Spring Budget at a glance

Below we round up the winners and losers from the Budget.

Winners

Drinkers

Drinkers will be raising a glass to Jeremy Hunt after he announced a further freeze on alcohol taxes until February 2025.

The Chancellor opted to hold booze duties at their current rate rather than increase them with inflation.

Alcohol duty typically goes up in line with inflation each year, but last year it was frozen until August 2024.

The announcement marks a major win for The Sun’s Save Our Sups campaign to help both bosses and punters.

Jeremy Hunt ‘fired the gun’ on a general election with Spring Budget: Harry Cole

Parents

In his giveaway Spring Budget, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt outlined reforms to child benefit in a major boost for parents.

From April the high-income child benefit charge threshold will be rising from £50,000 to £60,000.

As it stands, when parents or carers start earning over £50,000, they have to start paying the high-income child benefit charge.

This means you have to pay back 1% of your child benefit for every £100 of income earned over the £50,000 threshold.

But in April this will be upped to £60,000 instead.

Currently, when you reach a £60,000 salary, you have to repay the full amount of child benefit received.

From April, though, The Chancellor announced this cap will go up to £80,000 to ensure fewer parents are caught out.

It means parents will pay back 1% for every £200 earned, instead of every £100.

This will lead to hundreds of thousands of parents will save an average of £1,260 next year.

Workers

More than 27million workers are in line for a £450 wage boost thanks to a fresh National Insurance cut.

The 2p reduction has been confirmed by The Chancellor in today’s Spring Budget and will come into effect in just weeks.

The change means that someone earning an average salary of £35,000 will save more than £448.60 a year.

This increases to a maximum of around £750 for those on salaries above £50,000.

The legislation is being brought in next week to enable the cut to come in from April 6 – the start of the next tax year.

Two million self-employed people will see the main rate of National Insurance slashed from 8% to 6%, working out at an average saving of £350 a year.

Well-off savers

The government has announced the introduction of a new British ISA to encourage investment in UK companies and boost the City.

It will give people an additional £5,000 tax-free allowance to invest in UK assets, on top of the existing £20,000 limit.

There are currently four types of Individual Savings Accounts (ISA): Cash ISA, stocks and shares ISA, innovative finance ISA and Lifetime ISA.

Every tax year you can put money into one of each kind of ISA – the tax year runs from April 6 to April 5.

You can save up to £20,000 in one type of account or split the allowance across some or all of the other types.

Hard-up households

Millions of hard-up households will get extra help from the extension of a huge free cash fund later this year.

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has extended the Household Support Fund (HSF) for the fifth time – adding a further £500million to the pot.

Funding for the fourth round of the HSF was due to dry up for good on March 31.

However, the new support will now extend the HSF scheme for another six months.

Drivers

Fuel duty has been frozen for a 14th historic year in a massive win for drivers and The Sun’s Keep It Down campaign.

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt used today’s Budget to stop petrol prices rising with inflation, while also extending the temporary 5p cut.

Hailing The Sun’s campaign in his Budget speech, Mr Hunt said the move will save motorists an average of £50 next year.

Benefits claimants

Millions of households on benefits, including Universal Credit, will get a payment boost worth up to £470 from next month.

The Government confirmed in its Spring Budget documents today the benefits will be uprated by 6.7%, the CPI measure of inflation from September last year.

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt first revealed that payments will be going up in line with inflation in his Autumn Statement last November.

Pensioners

Pensioners are also set for a bumper rise of up to £901 to their state pension payments.

The government confirmed in its Spring Budget documents today that rates will increase by 8.5% as the triple lock remains in place.

The state pension rate is going up in April.

What is the Budget?

THE Budget is big news and where you’ll often hear announcements about taxes. But what exactly is it?

The Budget is when the Government outlines its plans for the economy including taxation and spending.

The Chancellor of the Exchequer delivers a speech in the House of Commons and announces plans for things like tax hikes, cuts, and changes to Universal Credit and the minimum wage.

At the same time, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) publishes an independent analysis of the UK economy.

Usually, the Budget is a once-a-year event and usually takes place in the Autumn, with a smaller update known as the Spring Statement.

But there have been exceptions in recent years when there have been more updates, or the announcements have taken place at different times, for example during the pandemic or when there is a General Election.

On the day of the Budget, usually a Wednesday, the Chancellor is photographed outside No 11 Downing Street with the red box.

He then heads to the House of Commons to deliver his speech, at around 12.30 following Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs).

Changes announced in the Budget are sometimes implemented the same day, while others may not have a set date.

For example, a change to tobacco duty usually happens on the same day, pushing up the price of cigarettes.

Some tax changes are set to come in at the start of a new tax year, which is April 6.

Other changes may need to pass through Parliament before coming into law.

Losers

Smokers

The cost of a packet of cigarettes will top £16 after today’s Budget.

The Treasury imposed a dramatic increase in tobacco duty to ensure a tax on vapes keeps smoking alternatives cheaper.

Last year Jeremy Hunt added £1.55 to a pack of 20 cigarettes.

The average cost of a 20-pack is currently £14.39 – making Britain one of the most expensive places to smoke in Europe.

But now prices are set to rise to an eye-watering £16 following a one-off increase of £2 per 100 cigarettes or 50 grams of tobacco.

This change is not set to come in until October 2026.

Vapers

Vape prices are set to rise after Jeremy Hunt whacked a new tax on e-cigs in today’s Spring Budget.

The tax will be imposed on imported e-cigs and manufacturers to make them unaffordable for kids.

It comes after a ban on disposable vapes was announced earlier this year as part of a clampdown.

The duty will apply to the liquid in vapes, with higher levels for products with more nicotine.

Again, this will not come into force until October 2026.

Second-home owners

The Chancellor has abolished multiple dwellings relief for stamp duty land tax (SDLT).

Among a raft of property tax reforms, Jeremy Hunt said stamp duty relief for people who purchase more than one dwelling in a single transaction was intended to support investment in the private rental sector.

However, an external evaluation found “no strong evidence that it had done so and that it was being regularly abused” and as a result, the Chancellor announced that he would abolish the relief.

Stamp duty land tax is a lump sum payment anyone buying a property or piece of land over a certain price has to pay.

Non-doms

The special tax status for non-domiciled individuals in the UK, which allows them to pay tax on only their UK earnings, will be abolished.

It’ll be replaced with a simpler system from April 2025, which Mr Hunt said would be more generous for the first four years, with non-doms having to pay more tax after that point.

This is expected to raise £2.7billion a year in taxes and will be used to help cut taxes for households.

Non-dom status is given to UK residents who declare their permanent home – or domicile – is in another country.

Individuals with non-domicile status do not have to pay UK tax on income from foreign investments.

Business class passengers

Mr Hunt announced higher rates of air passenger duty on business class tickets.

Jeremy Hunt said he would make a “one-off adjustment” to rates of Air Passenger Duty (APD) on “non-economy flights, only to account for high inflation in recent years”.

APD is levied by airlines on passengers who start their journeys at UK airports – it raises around £3.8billion per year.

First-time buyers

Opportunities to do more to help first-time buyers were missed in the Budget.

Previous reports had suggested that a 99% mortgage scheme to help people take their first step on the property ladder was being considered.

There had also been calls to overhaul Lifetime Isas (LISAs) too.

Consumer champion Martin Lewis is among those who had been urging Mr Hunt to overhaul “unfair” aspects of the savings accounts.

LISAs are often used by first-time buyers to get on the property ladder.

But the home must cost less than £450,000 – a threshold that has remained the same since the saving scheme was first launched in 2017 despite rising house prices.

The MoneySavingExpert.com (MSE) founder previously branded the accounts a “dead duck” product, as buying a property over this amount leaves savers paying a penalty.

Inheriting households

The rate at which families start paying inheritance tax (IHT) has been frozen since 2009, and it was previously extended by two years until April 2028.

This will force more and more households to pay the tax as house prices and inflation continue to increase.

Any plans to cut the thresholds appear to have been shelved until possibly the autumn statement.

It’s worth bearing in mind inheritance tax is due on only around 4% of estates.

Analysis from The Sun’s Political Editor Harry Cole

SO Jeremy Hunt has fired the starting gun on the election campaign with a highly political Budget.

There was lots of shouting, but with the cupboard bare, not as many giveaways as a Chancellor would have liked on the eve of battle.

As he delivered what will likely be the last Budget before Britain goes to the polls this autumn, the glum faces behind him would suggest Tory MPs did not think it would be enough to turn around the Conservatives bleak numbers.

Even with some tax cuts, the problem the Government has is the tax burden still remains at the highest level since 1947.

And nobody really thinks that will be going down rather than up under Labour.

On top of that, the cold hard numbers are hard to spin.

The small print of the Budget shows an extra £186.6 billion in stealth taxes over the next five years: more than double what the combined £105.4 billion savings from the combined tax cuts last November and today.

Also painful is the OBR’s prediction that net migration is going to stay at around 300,000 indefinitely and Tory tax changes have actually made Britain’s workshy issues worse.

With more people being dragged into higher tax bands, it turns out fewer people are bothering to work harder.

But the shape of the Tory manifesto is coming into sight, with the abolition of National Insurance clearly going to feature as a flagship election issue.

The dual taxation of wages through NICS and Income Tax has been a long running quirk of our complex tax system, but abolishing it completely would be eye-wateringly expensive.

That said, Hunt has reduced it by 4p, down to 8p in the pound on earnings in just six months, hence why he is dangling the prospect of phasing it out completely over the five years.

But given there are huge bills coming down the path for national security, massive compensation payouts, and sustainable public spending, is that loss of Treasury revenue really credible?

I suspect we will spend a large part of the election campaign arguing about that.

Hunt peppered his hour-long speech with attacks on the opposition parties, and countless name checks – and real cheques – for key marginal seats the Government hope to save at the election.

Given how many times he mentioned his own seat in Surrey and the vicious pop at the Liberal Democrats who could oust him, its clear the Chancellor is as worried about his own seat as he is about anyone else’s.

It was the tetchiest Budget I can remember, with countless interventions from the Deputy Speaker needed after Labour heckled their way through the measures.

If this is the shape of the election campaign to come, it’s going to be a very long year…

Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money@the-sun.co.uk.

Plus, you can join our Sun Money Chats and Tips Facebook group to share your tips and stories.

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Tax cuts scraped from an empty barrel distract from the most stimulating budgets https://usmail24.com/budget-jeremy-hunt-harry-cole-analysis/ https://usmail24.com/budget-jeremy-hunt-harry-cole-analysis/#respond Wed, 06 Mar 2024 16:21:09 +0000 https://usmail24.com/budget-jeremy-hunt-harry-cole-analysis/

So Jeremy Hunt has kicked off the election campaign with a very political budget. There was a lot of shouting, but with the cupboard bare there weren’t as many giveaways as a Chancellor would have wanted on the eve of battle. 2 Chancellor Jeremy Hunt presented his Spring Budget in the House of Commons todayCredit: […]

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So Jeremy Hunt has kicked off the election campaign with a very political budget.

There was a lot of shouting, but with the cupboard bare there weren’t as many giveaways as a Chancellor would have wanted on the eve of battle.

2

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt presented his Spring Budget in the House of Commons todayCredit: UK PARLIAMENT
Today's budget at a glance

2

Today’s budget at a glance

As he presented what is likely to be the last budget before Britain goes to the polls this autumn, the somber faces behind him might suggest that Tory MPs thought it would not be enough to turn around the Conservatives’ dismal figures.

Even with some tax cuts, the government’s problem remains tax Costs are still at the highest level since 1947.

And no one really thinks this will fall rather than rise under Labor.

Plus, the cold, hard numbers are hard to run.

Spring budget at a glance

The budget’s fine print shows an additional £186.6 billion in stealth taxes on the next one five years: more than double the combined savings of £105.4 billion from the combined tax cuts of last November and today.

Also painful is the OBR’s prediction that net migration will remain around 300,000 indefinitely and that Tory tax changes have actually worsened Britain’s problems.

As more people move into higher tax brackets, it appears that fewer people are bothering to work harder.

But the shape of the Tory manifesto is in sight, with the abolition of National Insurance It will clearly become an important election issue.

The double taxation of wages through the NICS and income tax is a long-standing quirk of our complex tax system, but abolishing it completely would be eye-wateringly expensive.

That said, Hunt has cut earnings by 4p to 8p in the pound in just six months, hence abandoning the prospect of phasing it out completely over the next five years.

But since they are huge accounts Is the loss of state revenue really credible as we move towards national security, massive compensation payments and sustainable public spending?

I suspect we will be discussing this for much of the election campaign.

Hunt peppered his hour-long speech with attacks on the opposition parties and numerous name checks – and real checks – on key marginal seats that the government hopes to save at the election.

Given how often he mentioned his own seat in Surrey and the vicious puppet among the Liberal Democrats who could oust him, it’s clear the Chancellor is as concerned about his own seat as anyone else’s.

It was the most testy Budget I can remember, with numerous interventions from the Deputy Leader required after Labor had fought its way through the measures.

If this is the shape of the coming election campaign, it will be a very long year…

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Revealed: Six in 10 Brits are planning at least three holidays by 2024, with budgets reaching up to £10,000 per getaway https://usmail24.com/six-ten-brits-planning-three-holidays-2024-budgets-high-10-000-getaway-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/six-ten-brits-planning-three-holidays-2024-budgets-high-10-000-getaway-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Thu, 04 Jan 2024 15:31:37 +0000 https://usmail24.com/six-ten-brits-planning-three-holidays-2024-budgets-high-10-000-getaway-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

By Jessica Hamilton Published: 6:40 AM EST, January 4, 2024 | Updated: 10:25 EST, January 4, 2024 Brits are trying to make up for lost time with one in six (59 percent) planning at least three holidays this year, a survey has found. The research shows they won’t be doing it cheaply either, with one […]

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Brits are trying to make up for lost time with one in six (59 percent) planning at least three holidays this year, a survey has found.

The research shows they won’t be doing it cheaply either, with one in three (33 percent) planning to spend at least £3,000 per outing.

Meanwhile, 11 percent admitted their budget is between £5,000 and £9,999, and several (three percent) admitted their budget is more than £10,000.

The study, a survey of 700 adults by Luxury escapes which aimed to explore the country’s travel options, found that 69 percent of Brits said they will spend at least the same, if not more, money on international holidays in 2024 than in 2023.

As many as 65 percent hope to treat themselves to a room upgrade, closely followed by a flight upgrade (57 percent) and good food (51 percent).

New research from travel company Luxury Escapes has found that 59 percent of Brits are planning at least three holidays in 2024 – with some budgeting more than £10,000

Accommodation and location are equally important: 66 percent have their sights set on five-star hotel resorts, while only 29 percent say they would be happy with a three- or four-star hotel.

Other common desires include seeing one of the seven natural wonders of the world (48 percent) and a bucket list holiday (42 percent), while 28 percent of Brits hope to go diving or snorkeling.

International holidays are the most popular, with almost all respondents (92 percent) reporting plans to travel abroad in 2024.

Thailand and the Maldives share the top spot for Britons’ all-time favorite holiday destination, while Greece was ranked as the most sought-after holiday destination for 2024 (37 per cent), followed by Italy (24 per cent) and Portugal (10 per cent).

The survey found that the Maldives (pictured) and Thailand share the top spot as Brits' all-time favorite holiday destination

The survey found that the Maldives (pictured) and Thailand share the top spot as Brits’ all-time favorite holiday destination

Britain’s attractions aren’t far behind, with 80 percent of Brits saying they have booked or are planning to book a staycation next year.

Holidays in London (30 percent), Edinburgh (17 percent) and the Scottish Highlands (13 percent) were named as the most sought-after destinations.

The cost of flights has been ranked as the most important factor when planning a holiday (46 per cent), followed closely by accommodation – with 30 per cent reporting booking trips six to 12 months in advance as a preventative measure.

Adam Schwab, Global CEO of Luxury Escapes, said: ‘Our research has shown how many Brits appreciate the feeling of luxury and that holidays provide an excuse to enjoy things they wouldn’t normally do – whether that’s a room upgrade, a bucket list diving excursion, or turning left by plane.’

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Eric Adams cuts budgets for police, libraries and schools https://usmail24.com/nyc-budget-cuts-schools-police-trash-html/ https://usmail24.com/nyc-budget-cuts-schools-police-trash-html/#respond Thu, 16 Nov 2023 20:38:12 +0000 https://usmail24.com/nyc-budget-cuts-schools-police-trash-html/

Mayor Eric Adams announced painful cuts to New York City services on Thursday, freezing police hiring and closing libraries on Sundays, warning that more cuts would be needed without additional federal funding to manage the migrant crisis . The cuts would cut the number of police officers below 30,000, reduce the Department of Education budget […]

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Mayor Eric Adams announced painful cuts to New York City services on Thursday, freezing police hiring and closing libraries on Sundays, warning that more cuts would be needed without additional federal funding to manage the migrant crisis .

The cuts would cut the number of police officers below 30,000, reduce the Department of Education budget by $1 billion over two years and slow the rollout of composting in the Bronx and Staten Island — one of the mayor’s key initiatives to combat rats and tackle climate change. . The cuts would also weaken two popular programs: summer school and universal preschool.

Mr. Adams said in a statement that he had to make cuts to municipal agencies in response to the rising costs of the migrant crisis, slowing tax revenues and the end of federal pandemic aid.

“No city should have to tackle a national humanitarian crisis largely alone, and without the significant and timely support we need from Washington, DC, today’s budget will only be the beginning,” he said.

The cuts to New York City’s $110 billion budget come as Mr. Adams faces two crises that could define his mayoralty and his chances of winning a second term — an influx of migrants from the southern border which he believes could destroy the city. , and a federal investigation into his campaign’s fundraising.

Mr. Adams, a Democrat in his second year as president, had warned at a news conference on Tuesday that the cuts would be “extremely painful for New Yorkers.”

“In all my time in government, this is probably one of the most painful exercises I have witnessed,” he said.

Progressive Democrats immediately criticized the mayor’s cuts, saying they would hurt working families. Lincoln Restler, chairman of the City Council’s progressive caucus, said his group would not participate in the cuts.

“Mayor Adams’ unnecessary, dangerous, and draconian budget cuts will only worsen New York’s affordability crisis and delay our city’s economic recovery by cutting funding for the schools, child care, food assistance, and more that help New Yorkers survive in this to live in the city and raise families.” said Mr. Restler.

Mr Adams said the costs of the migrant crisis were growing and were expected to cost almost $11 billion over two years, with a big gap in next year’s budget of $7 billion. The cuts will take effect immediately, city officials said, although the City Council will have a role in approving certain budget changes.

Council President Adrienne Adams said in a statement that some essential programs, such as libraries and the City University of New York, should be spared deep cuts. She said the city should explore new revenue to avoid cuts and shift migrant services to nonprofits.

“The government’s response in providing services to asylum seekers has been far too dependent on expensive emergency contracts with for-profit companies that have cost the city billions of dollars,” she said.

Police union president Patrick Hendry said the police staffing freeze would make New Yorkers less safe.

“This is truly a disaster for every New Yorker who cares about safe streets,” he said. “The police department has already reached breaking point, and these cuts will return us to a workforce we haven’t seen since the crime epidemic of the 1980s and 1990s. We can’t go back there.”

Mr Adams had said on Tuesday that eliminating a new class of 250 school safety officers would mean schools would “target parents and parent groups to do some volunteer work.” He said he would do everything he can to keep schools safe with fewer resources.

“We will be working at a very high level to get this done correctly,” he said.

Library leaders announced the cuts would force them to close branches on Sundays starting in December.

“Without adequate funding, we cannot maintain our current levels of service, and further cuts to library budgets will unfortunately result in deeper impacts to services,” leaders of the Brooklyn, Queens and New York Public Library said in a statement. .

Nonprofit leaders have criticized the cuts, saying they would hurt essential services, including food banks, domestic violence shelters, after-school programs and legal services. Michelle Jackson, executive director of the Human Services Council, which represents dozens of nonprofits, had asked the city to spare these services, arguing that the cuts would “make our city less fair, less safe and less stable for years to come.” .

Leaders of the left-wing Working Families Party said Mr Adams was unfairly blaming migrants for the cuts when he should have taken the blame.

“Mayor Adams is pursuing a death agenda with a thousand cuts,” the group said. “As any teacher, librarian or healthcare provider will tell you, there are no more cuts to make.”

City Comptroller Brad Lander said the city should continue to push for more state and federal funding, but called on Mr. Adams to “stop suggesting that asylum seekers are the reason for imposing tough cuts when they are only contributing to some of these budget deficits, many of which already existed.”

Just a day earlier, Mr. Adams had celebrated the first increase in enrollment at New York City public schools in eight years — largely due to an influx of migrants from the southern border. For the current school year, enrollment increased by approximately 1 percent (or approximately 8,000 students), bringing the total number of students to 915,000.

Now, city schools will make cuts at a time when educators say they need more resources to help new students and also continue the academic recovery from pandemic school closures. City officials said the Department of Education would be cut by $547 million this fiscal year and $600 million next year. In addition to cuts to the Summer Rising summer program for high school students and the elimination of thousands of spots in universal preschool for 3-year-olds, community schools will be cut by $10 million this fiscal year.

Michael Mulgrew, president of the United Federation of Teachers, said 653 schools would be forced to make mid-year cuts — about 43 percent of the school system.

“Class sizes will increase and school communities will be needlessly damaged,” he said.

Mr. Adams, a former police commissioner who ran for mayor as a working-class hero, acknowledged Tuesday that some of his top policy priorities would be hurt by the cuts.

“It’s more than painful for New Yorkers — it’s painful for us,” Mr. Adams said. “I have seen a lot of purely personal pain among the members of my team. These are initiatives that we have fought hard for.”

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