Budget 2024 live: Rachel Reeves reveals capital gains and stamp duty rise as part of £40bn in tax hikes

PoliticsBusiness & Finance
30 Oct 2024 • 11:20 PM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

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Rachel Reeves has announced increases in stamp duty rise and capital gains tax as part of tax hikes that will raise an eye-watering £40bn in her historic first Budget.

Launching an attack on previous Tory governments, the chancellor said Labour had inherited a £22bn “black hole”, and would never again “allow a government to play fast and loose with public finances.

After months spent warning the public of “tough choices” ahead, Ms Reeves promised to “invest, invest, invest” in order to “fix public services”.

Increases to employers’ national insurance contributions, stamp duty on second homes and a scrapping of VAT exemption on private schools fees were all confirmed by the chancellor, as well as a new duty on vaping liquids.

However, there were surprise announcements that the freeze on income tax thresholds, often described as a “stealth tax”, would not be extended past 2028, while Ms Reeves has also decided against a hike in fuel duty.

Responding to the Budget, Rishi Sunak accused Ms Reeves of “fiddling the figures” and criticised the government for embarking on an “enormous borrowing spree”.

Budget 2024 latest news

  • Rachel Reeves confirms Budget will raise taxes by £40bn
  • Reeves attacks Tories for playing ‘fast and loose’ with public finances
  • Stamp duty hike for second homes, Reeves says
  • No extension on income tax threshold freeze beyond 2028, Reeves announces
  • Big win for boozers as Reeves cuts draft duty

Watch: Rishi Sunak reacts to Budget 'Broken promise after broken promise'

15:14

Joe Middleton

Reeves confirms new Office for Value for Money

15:09

Howard Mustoe

Those with keen ears will have noticed the chancellor mention the Office for Value for Money.

In the summer, Ms Reeves said she had told Treasury officials to do a rapid audit of public spending.

She also said she would set up an independent watchdog called the Office for Value for Money in an effort to cut waste and get technology to speed things up in the civil service.

The office will aim to intervene where waste is detected as well as helping government departments sharpen up their buying methods.

As well as spending well, it will ensure the taxpayer gets value from things like the sale in Nat West shares that the government owns.

Today she confirmed that top civil servant David Goldstone will chair the body.

Labour MPs express relief after bracing for ‘massive spending cuts’

15:07

Andy Gregory

Labour MPs have expressed relief over Rachel Reeves’ Budget, in comments to LabourList.

One said they had seen “lots of messages in my [Constituency Labour Party] WhatsApp saying they are looking forward to canvassing this weekend much more now”.

Another new MP told the outlet of their “enormous relief”, saying: “The weeks of stories beforehand suggested massive cuts to public services and spending, instead we have a Budget for long-term economic growth and which gets to work rebuilding our services and infrastructure.”

And Labour council leader described the Budget as “absolutely superb”, praising increased funding for local government and a “transformational investment” in the NHS.

Labour accused of ‘betrayal’ of Scottish whisky industry

14:58

Andy Gregory

British multinational Diageo has reacted angrily to Rachel Reeves’ Budget, accusing the chancellor of breaking Labour’s promise to support the Scottish whisky industry.

Nuno Teles, managing director of the firm’s UK arm, said: “On the campaign trail, Keir Starmer pledged to ‘back the Scotch whisky industry to the hilt’.

“Instead, the government has broken this promise and slammed even more duty on spirits. This betrayal will leave a bitter taste for drinkers and pubs, while jeopardising jobs and investment across Scotland.”

Watch live: Office for Budget Responsibility responds to Rachel Reeves’ £40bn tax hikes

14:53

Andy Gregory

Budget averts 36% fall in net public investment, IPPR analyst says

14:51

Andy Gregory

Rachel Reeves’ Budget will keep investment in the public sector roughly stable over the course of this parliament, according to Carsten Jung, head of macroeconomics at the IPPR think-tank.

The new plans contrast with a 36 per cent fall under the previous Tory government’s plans, Mr Jung said.

What impact will Budget have on rail travel costs?

14:45

Andy Gregory

Regulated train fares in England will increase by up to 4.6 per cent next year and the price of most railcards – excluding the discount mechanism for disabled passengers – will rise by £5, Rachel Reeves announced in her Budget.

The increase in fares is one percentage point above July’s Retail Prices Index (RPI) measure of inflation, which until 2023 was used by Westminster governments to set the cap on annual rises in regulated fares.

But a Budget document published by the Treasury stated that the 4.6 per cent rise will be “the lowest absolute increase in three years”, with fare changes to come into force in March.

Pound strengthens slightly after Budget, but FTSE remains in the red

14:41

Andy Gregory

The pound has strengthened following Rachel Reeves’ Budget – although the FTSE 100 Index remained in the red.

Sterling, which was down 0.4 per cent against both the US dollar and euro prior to the Budget – later stood 0.2 per cent higher at $1.303 dollars and 0.1 per cent lower at €1.201.

However, London’s FTSE 100 Index fell 0.6 per cent.

Budget sets Britain ‘on path towards national renewal’, says TUC

14:39

Andy Gregory

The Trades Union Congress has hailed Rachel Reeves’ first Budget as a “vital first step towards repairing and rebuilding Britain”, but warned that “there is still a lot more work to do to clean up 14 years of Tory mess and economic decline.

TUC chief Paul Nowak said: “The chancellor was dealt a terrible hand by the last Conservative government – a toxic legacy of economic chaos, falling living standards and broken public services. But with today’s budget the Chancellor has acted decisively to deliver an economy that works for working people.

“The government’s investment plans are a vital first step towards repairing and rebuilding Britain – securing the stronger growth, higher wages and decent public services that the country desperately needs.

“Tax rises will ensure much-needed funds for our NHS, schools and the rest of our crumbling public services, with those who have the broadest shoulders paying a fairer share. The chancellor was right to prioritise hospitals and classrooms over private jets.

“There is still a lot more work to do to clean up 14 years of Tory mess and economic decline – including better supporting and strengthening our social security system. But this budget sets us on an urgently needed path towards national renewal.”

Watch: Rachel Reeves mocks Rishi Sunak with private jet announcement

14:35

Andy Gregory

Rachel Reeves mocked Tory leader Rishi Sunak as she unveiled a rise of 50 per cent on air passenger duty for those travelling by private jet.

Sunak accuses Reeves of ‘tidal wave of anti-business regulations'

14:32

Andy Gregory

Rishi Sunak has accused the chancellor of “delivering a tidal wave of anti-business regulations” and claimed the Labour Party is led by people “who have no experience of business”.

The former prime minister told the Commons: “Today, the OBR has forecast growth is going to be lower under this government than it was forecast to be under the Conservatives, that’s the change they have brought.

“This is what happens when the Labour Party is led by people who have no experience of business. Relentlessly talking down our economy, delivering a tidal wave of anti-business regulations, destroying our flexible labour market, and raising taxes to the highest level in our country’s history.

“It’s a classic Labour agenda – higher taxes, higher borrowing, no plan for growth and working people paying the price.”

Watch: Rachel Reeves pledges unprecedented NHS funding boost to transform healthcare

14:21

Joe Middleton

Sunak claims pensioners have been ‘squeezed’ in Budget

14:13

Joe Middleton

Rishi Sunak has warned that Britain’s poorest pensioners have been “squeezed” in the Budget.

He told the Commons: “Britain’s poorest pensioners squeezed, welfare spending out of control and a streak of tax rises they promised the working people of this country they would not do.

The former prime minister said: “National insurance, up. Capital gains tax, up. Inheritance tax, up. Energy taxes, up. Business rates, up. First-time buyer stamp duty, up. Pensions tax, up. They have fiddled the figures.”

How will the employer National Insurance rise affect you?

14:07

Joe Middleton

Rachel Reeves has confirmed that employer national insurance contributions (NICs) will rise following an announcement at Labour’s first Budget.

The measure has caused strong political debate, focused on whether it would break Labour’s manifesto pledge to not raise taxes on “working people.”

Ministers and Treasury officials have indicated the government’s position is that the measure would not break their manifesto pledge. Meanwhile, Institute for Fiscal Studies director Paul Johnson has argued it would be a “straightforward breach.”

Here are the facts about the debate and how the measure could affect you:

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Rishi Sunak is responding to Rachel Reeves Budget

14:02

Joe Middleton

The former prime minister Rishi Sunak is responding to Rachel Reeves Budget in the Commons.

Mr Sunak repeats a similar point he has been making for weeks and that Labour has raised taxes.

He said: “Time and again we Conservatives warned Labour would tax, borrow and spend far beyond what they were telling the country and time and again they denied they had such plans.

“But today the truth has come out, proof that they planned to do this all along because today’s Budget sees the fiscal rules fiddled, borrowing increased by billions of pounds, inflation-busting handouts for the trade unions, Britain’s poorest pensioners squeezed, welfare spending out of control and a spree of tax rises they promised the working people of this country they would not do.”

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Reeves announces £22.6bn increase in the day-to-day health budget and 10-year plan

13:57

Joe Middleton

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has announced a £22.6bn increase in the day-to-day health budget.

Announcing the government’s plans for the NHS, Ms Reeves told the Commons: “In the spring, we will publish a 10-year plan for the NHS to deliver a shift from hospital to community, from analogue to digital, and from sickness to prevention. Today, we are announcing a down payment on that plan to enable the NHS to deliver 2% productivity growth next year.”

She added: “Today, because of the difficult decision that I have taken on tax, welfare and spending, I can announce that I am providing a £22.6 billion increase in the day to-day health budget, and a £3.1 billion increase in the capital budget, over this year and next year.

“This is the largest real-terms growth in day-to-day NHS spending outside of Covid since 2010.”

Reaction: Frozen income tax thresholds a tax on working people, say top research institute

13:52

Joe Middleton

The National Institute of Economic and Social Research has said that Rachel Reeves decision to keep the income thresholds frozen until 2028/29 is a tax on working people.

Ben Caswell, a senior economist at the NIESR, said: “The Chancellor’s statement that her actions will not raise taxes on working people, while technically true, is at odds with how tax bands function in reality.

“As people’s wages rise to keep up with inflation, they are pushed into higher tax brackets. The government’s decision to keep income tax thresholds unchanged until 2028/29 is, in fact, a tax on working people.”

Graph of UK national insurance main rates

13:52

Athena Stavrou

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£1.4bn to rebuild 500 schools

13:51

Athena Stavrou

The Chancellor has announced £1.4 billion to rebuild more than 500 schools.

The move is part of a 19 per cent real-terms increase in the Department for Education’s capital budget, along with £2.1 billion for school maintenance.

Investment in broadband connectivity

13:49

Athena Stavrou

Chancellor Rachel Reeves said £500 million will be spent on improving broadband connectivity across the country.

Announcing the Government’s investment plans, she told the Commons: “For our world-leading creative industries, we will legislate to provide additional tax relief for visual effect costs in film and TV, and we are providing £25 million for the North East Combined Authority, which they plan to use to remediate the Crown Works Studio site in Sunderland, creating 8,000 new jobs.

“To unlock these growth industries of the future, we will protect Government investment in research and development with more than £20 billion of funding.

“This includes at least £6.1 billion to protect core research funding for areas like engineering, biotechnology and medical science, through Research England, other research councils, and the national academies.

“We will extend the Innovation Accelerators programme in Glasgow, in Manchester and in the West Midlands.

“And with over £500 million of funding next year, the Science, Technology and Innovation Secretary (Peter Kyle), will continue to drive progress in improving fast, reliable broadband and mobile coverage across our country, including in rural areas.”

HS2 tunnel to be built to London Euston

13:47

Athena Stavrou

The Chancellor has announced that the government is “committing the funding required” to begin tunnelling work to bring HS2 to London Euston station.

The announcement will be welcomed following speculation that the line could instead finish outside of London.

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£5bn to be invested in housebuilding

13:44

Athena Stavrou

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has announced “over £5 billion of Government investment” in housebuilding and £1 billion of funding to remove dangerous cladding next year.

The move is a boost to Labour’s cornerstone promise to build 1.5 million homes to address the housing crisis.

£500mn increase in funding to fix potholes

13:42

Tom Barnes

Rachel Reeves has announced a £500m increase in road maintenance budget in order to fix an additional 1 million potholes each year.

£650m of local transport funding will also be spent to improve connections.

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‘Significant real-terms funding increase’ for local government, Reeves says

13:41

Tom Barnes

Rachel Reeves said there would be a “significant real-terms funding increase” for local government next year, noting this included £1.3 billion of additional grant funding to deliver “essential services”.

The Chancellor said there would be at least £600 million in grant funding for social care and £230 million to tackle homelessness and rough sleeping.

Ms Reeves also said: “We are today confirming that Greater Manchester and the West Midlands will be the first mayoral authorities to receive integrated settlements from next year, giving mayors meaningful control of the funding for their local areas.”

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No extension on income tax threshold freeze beyond 2028

13:38

Athena Stavrou

The Government will not extend the freeze on income tax and national insurance thresholds beyond 2027/28, the Chancellor has announced, saying it would “hurt working people” to keep thresholds frozen.

There was speculation Reeves would extend the freeze, in a move that would have been criticised as a way for the Treasury to boost revenue from income tax without increasing its rates. Since 2021, the personal allowance has been frozen at £12,570. This is the amount that can be paid before income tax deductions begin.

The three rates of income tax have also remained frozen during this time. Although an extension isn’t an income tax rise per se, it would have meanr more workers paying more income tax in effect.

Stamp duty hike for second homes

13:34

Chloe Hubbard

Stamp duty land tax surcharge for second homes will increase by two percentage points to five per cent, and will come into effect from Thursday, Reeves announced.

“This will support over 130,000 additional transactions from people buying their first home, or moving home, over the next five years,” she pledged during the Budget.

‘Deeply disturbing’: Charity condemns Labour’s continuation of Tory benefits plans

13:32

Holly Bancroft

Rachel Reeves has announced that Labour will continue with Tory reforms to the work capability assessment, which is used to decide eligibility for working-age incapacity benefits.

In a bid to keep the benefits bill down, Labour will reduce access to these benefits, but the plans have been met with fury by disability campaigners who said the announcement was “deeply disturbing”.

Richard Kramer, chief executive of Sense, has said the government has “played into the dangerous narrative that disabled people should be forced to work and tightened the Work Capability Assessement. They did this knowing that not all disabled people can work - and that, withint three years, it will leave more than 424,000 disabled people, who are unable to work, worse off by more than £4,000 a month.”

“We are demanding that this dismal decision is urgently reversed”, he said.

Reeves announces passenger duty rise of 50% for private jets and aims jab at Sunak

13:30

Joe Middleton

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has announced a passenger duty rise of 50 per cent for private jets.

She mocked Tory leader Rishi Sunak as she joked his “ears have pricked up” when she mentioned air passenger duty.

She told the Commons: “Air passenger duty has not kept up with inflation in recent years so we are introducing an adjustment, meaning an increase of no more than £2 for an economy class short-haul flight.

“But I am taking a different approach when it comes to private jets, increasing the rate of air passenger duty by a further 50%. That is equivalent to £450 per passenger for a private jet to, say, California?”

Analysis: Reeves risks backlash with inheritance tax hike

13:30

Kate Devlin

Critics have denounced it as a “death tax” and Ms Reeves has been warned her she risks punishing middle-class homeowners, but the chancellor did announce plan to squeeze millions of pounds more from inheritance tax.

The levy is routinely found to be one of voters’ least favourite measures, despite just a tiny number of estates paying it.

Official figures released last week also show Britons are already paying more inheritance tax.

The Treasury took in £4.3bn in the six months since April, £400m more than in the same period in the previous financial year and a rise of 10 per cent, HM Revenue and Customs date showed.

Measures to crackdown on shoplifting

13:28

Athena Stavrou

Reeves has announced further action to crackdown on shoplifting on UK highstreets.

The chancellor said the government is set to scrap “effective immunity for low value shoplifting,” and provide additional funding to crackdown on organised gangs that target retailers.

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Chancellor undoes Tory tax threshold freezes in final Budget rabbit

13:25

Archie Mitchell

Rachel Reeves has pulled a final Budget rabbit out of the hat, promising to end the tax threshold freezes introduced by Rishi Sunak.

The so-called stealth tax, which saw workers quietly dragged into higher tax brackets, were a way of raising billions of extra revenue without explicitly raising income tax or national insurance.

But while Ms Reeves said extending the freeze could raise “billions of pounds to deal with the black hole in our public finances and repair our public services”, she said it “would hurt working people and take more money out of their payslips”.

It would have been embarrassing for the chancellor to keep the freezes in place, having accused the Tories of “picking the pockets of working people” over the move in the past.

Analysis: Relief for the poorest households in debt

13:22

Holly Bancroft

Rachel Reeves has said that she will reduce the level of debt repayments that can be taken from people’s Universal Credit payments.

After discussion with think tanks such as the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, Ms Reeves announced that the level of debt repayments that can be taken out of people’s Universal Credit will be lowered from 25 per cent to 15 per cent each month.

This is good news for 1.2 million of the poorest households who will be able to keep more of their Universal Credit payments. And hopefully put them in a better financial position to manage their debt in the long run. Those who benefit will gain an average of £420 a year, according to Ms Reeves’ calculations.

The Joseph Rowntree Foundation has been calling on the government to take this step so that people aren’t forced to choose between going without essentials or getting into debt.

Allowing families to keep more money each month will help them feed their children and pay other households bills - hopefully keeping them from going deeper into debt and relying on crisis charity help.

Big win for boozers as Reeves cuts draft duty

13:21

Archie Mitchell

Despite unveiling £40bn worth of tax hikes, Rachel Reeves showed a soft spot for Britain’s boozers in her Budget.

The chancellor promised to cut draft duty by 1.7 per cent, taking a penny off the price of a pint in the pub.

It came as Ms Reeves confirmed she will let duty on non-draft products rise in line with inflation.

The move shows Ms Reeves is backing Britain’s beleaguered hospitality industry, with pub and restaurant bosses having consistently called for the balance of taxes to be tilted away from hospitality venues and towards supermarkets.

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Reeves announces fresh tax on vaping and one-off tobacco duty rise

13:21

Joe Middleton

Chancellor Rachel Reeves said the government will renew the tobacco duty escalator and introduce a flat-rate duty on all vaping liquid from October 2026.

She added: “Alongside an additional one-off increase in tobacco duty to maintain the incentive to give up smoking.

“And we will increase the soft drinks industry levy to account for inflation since it was introduced, as well as increasing the duty in line with CPI (Consumer Prices Index) each year going forward. These measures will raise nearly £1 billion per year by the end of the forecast period.”

Analysis: Reeves goes ahead on ‘ideological’ private schools tax

13:20

David Maddox

There are serious doubts now that imposing VAT on private school fees will be anything more than ideological rather than raise £1.6 billion needed to fund 6,000 new teachers.

Ms Reeves though has ignored the warnings and gone where no other chancellor has gone before in taxing education.

Already this is a clear dividing line with the Tories who have vowed to reverse the tax on schools and it leaves Labour in danger of looking as though they are attacking the middle class and aspiration.

It is certainly a move which Tony Blair - an old boy of Fettes in Edinburgh (the Scottish Eton) - would not have considered.

Thousands of children are now set to be moved into state schools at the cost of the taxpayer.

Reeves mocks Sunak over air passenger duty

13:19

Athena Stavrou

Chancellor Rachel Reeves mocked Tory leader Rishi Sunak as she joked his “ears have pricked up” when she mentioned air passenger duty.

The Chancellor told the Commons: “Air passenger duty has not kept up with inflation in recent years so we are introducing an adjustment, meaning an increase of no more than £2 for an economy class short-haul flight.

“But I am taking a different approach when it comes to private jets, increasing the rate of air passenger duty by a further 50%. That is equivalent to £450 per passenger for a private jet to, say, California?”

Non-dom tax abolished

13:18

Athena Stavrou

The Chancellor has just announced the abolishment of the non-nom tax status from April 2025.

She told the house that those who “make this country their home” they should pay the correct tax.

A “non-domiciled individual” is a person who lives in the UK but is not settled here permanently.

They will only pay UK tax on money made in the country, and can avoid paying it on their foreign income if they opt to claim the “remittance basis”. This allows wealthy individuals living in the UK to elect the lower-tax country as their domicile, making for major savings.

Reeves confirms no increase to national insurance, VAT or income tax for working people

13:15

Joe Middleton

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has confirmed she will not increase national insurance, VAT or income tax for working people.

She told the Commons: “The last government made cuts of £20 billion to employees’ and self-employed national insurance in their final two budgets.

“These tax cuts were not honest. Because we now know they were based on a forecast which the OBR (Office of Budget Responsibility) say would have been ‘materially different’ had they known the true extent of the last government’s cover-up.

“Since July, I have been urged on multiple occasions to reconsider these cuts. To increase the taxes that working people pay and see in their payslips. But I have made an important choice today: To keep every single commitment that we made on tax in our manifesto.

“So I say to working people: I will not increase your national insurance, your VAT, or your income tax. Working people will not see higher taxes in their payslips as a result of the choices I make today. That is a promise made – and a promise fulfilled.”

Help for small businesses announced

13:15

Athena Stavrou

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has unveiled an increase to the Employment Allowance for small businesses, which allows eligible employers to reduce their national insurance liability.

She told the Commons: “I am today increasing the Employment Allowance from £5,000 to £10,500. This means 865,000 employers won’t pay any national insurance at all next year, and over one million will pay the same or less as they did previously.

“This will allow a small business to employ the equivalent of four full-time workers on the national living wage without paying any national insurance on their wages.”

Analysis: Reeves caves over fuel duty

13:13

Archie Mitchell

Rachel Reeves has become the latest chancellor to cave under pressure to keep fuel duty frozen.

In a very expensive boost to drivers, Ms Reeves said she will spend more than £3bn avoiding an increase in the levy next year and promised “no higher taxes at the petrol pump”.

She said that baked into the numbers she inherited from the previous government is an assumption that fuel duty will rise by inflation next year, and that a temporary 5p cut will be reversed.

The chancellor said it would cost more than £3bn to keep the cut, but added that letting fuel duty rise next year would be “the wrong choice for working people”.

She becomes the latest in a long line of chancellors to crumble under pressure from the motoring lobby to keep fuel duty frozen, rather than letting it rise in line with inflation.

Capital gains tax to be increased

13:11

Athena Stavrou

The headline rates of capital gains tax will increase, with the lower rate rising from 10 per cent to 18 per cent and the higher rate from 20 per cent to 24 per cent, the Chancellor has announced.

Capital Gains Tax (CGT) is paid on the profit made when an asset which has increased in value is sold. It is applied to things like the sale of personal possessions worth more than £6,000 (apart from a car), property that’s not the seller’s main home, shares and business assets.

Analysis: Reeves pulls out her first rabbit

13:10

David Maddox

Have briefed there will be “no rabbits” produced in her Budget, the chancellor has produced one on employers’ national insurance contributions.

By exempting 650,000 small businesses from NICs altogether and reducing the bill for another million she has seen off some of the criticism of the overall tax rise on NICs.

It is a clever move because if she wants to produce economic growth she will need to get it from start-ups and small businesses going forward.

Analysis: Rachel Reeves announces big increase in carers allowance

13:08

Holly Bancroft

Chancellor Rachel Reeves told the Commons: “Carers allowance currently provides up to £81.90 per week to help those with additional caring responsibilities. Today I can confirm that we are increasing the weekly earning limits to the equivalent of 16 hours at the national living wage per week. The largest increase in carers allowance since it was introduced in 1976.

This means a carer can now earn over £10,000 a year while receiving carers allowance - allowing them to increase their hours where they want to and allowing them to keep more of their money.”

She also said she was concerned about carers getting in to debt to repay DWP overpayments and confirmed that the work and pensions secretary would carry out a review to “develop the right solutions”.

Increase to employers’ national insurance contributions

13:06

Athena Stavrou

A 1.2 per cent increase to employers’ national insurance contributions (NICs) has just been confirmed. This is different to NICs paid by workers – it is paid by their employers on top of their wages.

The rate will now rise from 13.8 per cent to 15 per cent. Previous analysis has estimated that this measure could raise up to £4.5bn, but some economists are more critical.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has spoken out against the move in the past, saying it would raise closer to £4.5bn.

What’s more, director Paul Johnson previously said it would constitute a “straightforward breach” of Labour’s manifesto pledge not to raise taxes on working people, as employers are likely to pass the rise off in the form of lower wage growth.

Reeves announces rise to carers allowance

13:06

Joe Middleton

The weekly earnings limit for carers allowance will rise to the equivalent of 16 hours a week at the national living wage, the largest increase since the allowance was introduced, the chancellor has announced.

She said they would also review overpayments.

Reeves attacks Tory legacy: ‘We will never again play fast and loose with public finances’

13:06

Tom Barnes

Rachel Reeves said the Government would publish a “line-by-line breakdown of the £22 billion black hole that we inherited”, saying this showed “hundreds of unfunded pressures on the public finances”.

The Chancellor told MPs: “The Office for Budget Responsibility has published their own review of the circumstances around the spring budget forecast.

“They say that the previous government, and I quote, ‘did not provide the OBR with all the available information to them’ and that had they known about these ‘undisclosed spending pressures that have since come to light’ then their spring budget forecast for spending would have been, and, I quote again, ‘materially different’.”

Ms Reeves added: “Let me make this promise to the British people: never again will we allow a government to play fast and loose with the public finances and never again will we allow a government to hide the true state of our public finances from our independent forecaster.

“That’s why today, I can confirm that we will implement in full the 10 recommendations from the independent Office for Budget Responsibility’s review.”

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Fuel duty freeze remains

13:04

Athena Stavrou

The chancellor has just said that the government will keep the freeze on fuel duty.

This is good news for drivers, who would have had the 7p rise passed on to them at the pump.

Fuel duties, or taxes, apply to purchases of petrol, diesel and a variety of other fuels used both for vehicles and domestic heating.

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Analysis: Important win for the Lib Dem leader on the carer allowance

13:02

David Maddox

Sir Ed Davey, who cares for his disabled son and previously cared for his mother, has been a staunch campaigner for carers and their financial needs.

The increase of extra income to keep the carers’ allowance to £10,000 will help thousands of people across the country.

More important will be the efforts to end the cliff edge where they lose the allowance and the issue of overpayments.

The Lib Dem leader will see this as an early personal victory as he leads his newly enlarged 72-MP bloc.

Reeves confirms the government will stick to Bank of England’s 2 per cent inflation target

13:01

Joe Middleton

Chancellor Rachel Reeves told the Commons that the government would stick to the Bank of England’s two per cent inflation target.

The UK inflation rate was 1.7 percent in September 2024, down from 2.2 percent in the previous month.

She said: “Today, I can confirm that we will maintain the MPC’s (Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee) target of 2 per cent inflation, as measured by the 12-month increase in the Consumer Prices Index.”

Reeves announces increase to minimum wage

13:00

Athena Stavrou

Rachel Reeves has announced the increase of minimum wage by 6.7 percent.

The chancellor told the house that the national living wage will see it rise £12.21 an hour next year as she delivers Labour’s first budget in 14 years.

It will also be raised for 18-20-year-olds by 16.3 per cent - bringing it up to £10 an hour for this group.

Ahead of the budget, John Foster, chief policy and campaigns officer at the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), said the national living wage was a “valuable tool” for protecting the incomes of the poorest in society “but with productivity stagnant, businesses will have to accommodate this increase against a challenging economic backdrop and growing pressure on their bottom line”.

Crackdown on welfare fraud

12:57

Athena Stavrou

Reeves has announced a fresh crackdown on welfare fruad.

She told the house that the new strategy will raise £3.4bn a year by the end of the fiscal forecast and will including direct access to bank accounts to recover debt.

Budget to raise taxes by £40 billion

12:54

Athena Stavrou

Chancellor Rachel Reeves told the Commons “this Budget raises taxes by £40 billion”.

She said: “The leadership campaign for the party opposite has now been going on for over three months, but in all that time not one, single apology for what they did to our country – because the Conservative Party has not changed.

“But this is a changed Labour Party and we will restore stability to our country again.

“The scale and seriousness of the situation that we have inherited cannot be underestimated.

“Together, the black hole in our public finances this year, which recurs every year, the compensation payments which they did not fund, and their failure to assess the scale of the challenges facing our public services means this Budget raises taxes by £40 billion.

“Any chancellor standing here today would face this reality, and any responsible chancellor would take action. That is why today, I am restoring stability to our public finances and rebuilding our public services.”

Seven key pillars of Labour growth strategy

12:54

Tom Barnes

Rachel Reeves has spoken about what she calls the seven key pillars as Labour’s growth strategy:

- Restore economic stability.

- Increasing investment and building infrastructure - transforming planning rules.

- Working with devolved governments.

- Creation of Skills England, to tackle economic inactivity.

- Expanding opportunities for small and medium sized businesses.

- Protecting record funding for research and development.

- Maximise growth benefits of clean energy mission.

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Rachel Reeves confirms Budget will raise taxes by £40bn

12:50

Kate Devlin

The chancellor has confirmed that her first Budget will raise taxes by an eye-watering £40bn.

But she insisted that the blame lay with the Conservatives. She accused them of blowing a hole in the public finances and failing to fund compensations schemes, such as the one for those affected by the infected blood scandal.

On her tax rises she told MPs: “Any chancellor standing here today would have to face this reality”.

Labour will rebuild Britain, says Reeves

12:48

Joe Middleton

The Labour Party will rebuild Britain, chancellor Rachel Reeves has said.

She told the Commons: “This is not the first time that it has fallen to the Labour Party to rebuild Britain.

“In 1945, it was the Labour party that rebuilt our country out of the rubble of the Second World War. In 1964, it was the Labour Party that rebuilt Britain with the white heat of technology. And in 1997, it was the Labour Party that rebuilt our schools and our hospitals.

“Today, it falls to this Labour Party, this Labour Government to rebuild Britain once again.”

Reeves to fall short of Gladstone’s four-hour Budget epic

12:47

Archie Mitchell

The Independent’s Archie Mitchell reports:

Rachel Reeves is expected to speak for around an hour, well short of the longest Budget speech in history.

The chancellor who gave the longest continuous Budget speech was William Gladstone on April 18, 1853. The speech lasted four hours and 45 minutes.

Benjamin Disraeli gave a longer Budget speech in 1852, lasting five hours, but took a break part way through.

And, as well as the longest speech, Mr Gladstone holds the record for having delivered the most, with twelve under his belt.

Reeves opens Budget by saying her ‘belief in Britain burns brighter than ever’

12:47

Tom Barnes

Chancellor Rachel Reeves opened her Budget speech by stating that her “belief in Britain burns brighter than ever”.

She told the Commons: “On July the 4th, the country voted for change. This government was given a mandate: to restore stability to our country and to begin a decade of national renewal. To fix the foundations and deliver change through responsible leadership in the national interest. That is our task and I know we can achieve it.

“My belief in Britain burns brighter than ever and the prize on offer is immense. As the prime minister said on Monday, change must be felt: more pounds in people’s pockets, an NHS that is there when you need it, an economy that is growing, creating wealth and opportunity for all because that is the only way to improve living standards.

“And the only way to drive economic growth is to invest, invest, invest.

“There are no shortcuts and to deliver that investment we must restore economic stability and turn the page on the last 14 years.”

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Funding for Infected Blood Scandal and Post Office compensation schemes

12:46

Athena Stavrou

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has announced £11.8 billion to compensate those impacted by the infected blood scandal, and £1.8 billion to compensate the victims of the Post Office Horizon scandal.

Ms Reeves said: “The previous government also failed to budget for costs which they knew would materialise. That includes funding for vital compensation schemes for victims of two terrible injustices: the infected blood scandal and the Post Office Horizon scandal.

“The Leader of the Opposition rightly made an unequivocal apology for the injustice of the infected blood scandal on behalf of the British state, but he did not budget for the costs of compensation.

“Today, for the very first time, we will provide specific funding to compensate those infected and those affected, in full with £11.8 billion in this Budget.

“I am also today setting aside £1.8 billion to compensate victims of the Post Office Horizon scandal, redress that is long overdue for the pain and injustice that they have suffered.”

Analysis: Rachel Reeves goes on the attack on the £22bn black hole

12:44

David Maddox

The Independent’s polticial editor David Maddox writes:

After weeks of the Tories questioning her claims over a £22 billion black hole in the public finances, Rachel Reeves is promising a line by line analysis today to prove it exists.

She quotes the Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR) to say it was deceived by the alst government and its projections in the spring would have been “materially different” hd it known the full facts.

Ms Reeves wants to pin the blames for her tax rises and Budget misery on Tory mismanagement.

This could well be the debate framed for the next five years.