1. Covid-19 An extra £1.65 billion cash injection to ensure the
Covid-19 vaccination roll-out in England continues to be a success.
£28 million to increase the UK’s capacity for vaccine testing,
support for clinical trials and improve the UK’s ability to rapidly
acquire samples of new variants of COVID-19. £22 million for a
world-leading study to test the effectiveness of...Request free trial
1. Covid-19
- An extra £1.65 billion cash injection to ensure the
Covid-19 vaccination roll-out in England continues to be a
success.
- £28 million to increase the UK’s capacity for vaccine
testing, support for clinical trials and improve the UK’s
ability to rapidly acquire samples of new variants of
COVID-19.
- £22 million for a world-leading study to test the
effectiveness of combinations of different Covid-19
vaccines. This will also fund the world’s first study
assessing the effectiveness of a third dose of vaccine to
improve the response against current and future variants of
COVID-19.
- A further £5 million on top of a previous £9 million
investment in clinical-scale mRNA manufacturing, to create
a ‘library’ of vaccines that will work against Covid-19
variants for possible rapid response deployment.
- Extending £500 Test and Trace support payments in
England until the summer.
2. Protecting jobs and livelihoods
3. Strengthening the public finances
- Maintaining the income tax Personal Allowance and
higher rate threshold from April 2022 until April 2026.
- To balance the need to raise revenue with the objective
of having an internationally competitive tax system, the
rate of Corporation Tax will increase to 25%, which will
remain the lowest rate in the G7. In order to support the
recovery, the increase will not take effect until 2023.
Businesses with profits of £50,000 or less, around 70% of
actively trading companies, will continue to be taxed at
19% and a taper above £50,000 will be introduced so that
only businesses with profits greater than £250,000 will be
taxed at the full 25% rate.
- Maintaining inheritance tax thresholds at their current
levels until April 2026.
- Fuel duty will be frozen for the 11thconsecutive year.
- Alcohol duties will be frozen across the board for the
second year running saving drinkers £1.7 billion.
- Capping the amount of SME payable R&D tax credit
that a business can receive in any one year at £20,000
(plus three times the company’s total PAYE and NICs
liability).
- Maintaining the Lifetime Allowance at its current level
of £1,073,100 until April 2026.
- The adult ISA annual subscription limit for 2021-22
will remain unchanged at £20,000.
4. An investment-led recovery
- Beginning April 2021, the new super-deduction will cut
companies’ tax bill by 25p for every pound they invest in
new equipment. This is worth around £25 billion to UK
companies over the two-year period the super-deduction will
be in full effect.
- Eight new English Freeports will be based in East
Midlands Airport, Felixstowe & Harwich, Humber,
Liverpool City Region, Plymouth, Solent, Thames and
Teesside.
- The £375 million UK-wide ‘Future Fund: Breakthrough’
will invest in highly innovative companies such as those
working in life sciences, quantum computing, or clean tech,
that are aiming to raise at least £20 million of funding.
- Reforms to the immigration system will help ambitious
UK businesses attract the brightest and best international
talent.
- A new Help to Grow scheme to offer up to 130,000
companies across the UK a digital and management boost.
- £2.8 million to support a UK and Ireland bid to host
the 2030 World Cup and £25 million investment in UK
grassroots sports, enough for around 700 new pitches.
- Launching a review of Research & Development tax
reliefs to make sure the UK remains a competitive location
for cutting-edge research.
- £20 million to fund a UK-wide competition to develop
floating offshore wind demonstrators and help support the
government’s aim to generate enough electricity from
offshore wind to power every home by 2030.
- £68 million to fund a UK-wide competition to deliver
first-of-a-kind long-duration energy storage prototypes
that will reduce the cost of net zero by storing excess low
carbon energy over longer periods.
- £4 million for a biomass feedstocks programme in the UK
to identify ways to increase the production of green energy
crops and forest products that can be used for energy.
- Publication of the the government’s ‘Build Back Better:
our plan for growth’.
- Over £1 billion funding for a further 45 towns in
England through the Towns Fund, supporting their long-term
economic and social regeneration as well as their immediate
recovery from the impacts of COVID-19.
- £135 million to progress A66 Trans-Pennine upgrade.
- £28 million to fund the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee
celebrations in 2022, delivering a major celebration for
the UK.
- Plans for at least £15 billion of green gilt issuance
in the coming financial year, to help finance critical
projects to tackle climate change and other environmental
challenges, fund important infrastructure investment, and
create green jobs across the UK.
- £150 million Community Ownership Fund will allow
communities across the UK to invest to protect the assets
that matter most to them such as pubs, theatres, shops, or
local sports clubs.
- £18.8 million to transform local cultural projects in
Hartlepool, Carlisle, Wakefield and Yeovil.
- Publication of the prospectus for the £4.8 billion
UK-wide Levelling Up Fund, providing guidance for local
areas on how to submit bids for the first round of funding
starting in 21-22.
5. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
- Individuals and businesses in Scotland, Wales and
Northern Ireland continue to be supported by the UK
Government through the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme,
self-employment grants, loan schemes and VAT cuts. Devolved
administrations have received Barnett funding to provide
support in areas of devolved responsibility.
- The Budget confirms an additional £2.4 billion for the
devolved administrations for 2021-22 through the Barnett
formula. This is an additional £1.2 billion for the
Scottish Government, £740 million for the Welsh Government,
£410 million for the Northern Ireland Executive.
- The devolved administrations will also receive £1.4
billion of funding in 2021-22 outside the Barnett formula.
- £27 million in the Aberdeen Energy Transition Zone and
£5 million in the Global Underwater Hub in Scotland, the
first stage in delivering the North Sea Transition Deal.
- Three Growth Deals in Scotland – Ayrshire, Argyll &
Bute, and Falkirk – will receive funding more quickly.
- £4.8 million to support the development of a
demonstration hydrogen hub in Holyhead, Anglesey.
- Up to £30 million for the Global Centre for Rail
Excellence in Wales.
- Three City and Growth Deals – in North-Wales, Mid-Wales
and Swansea Bay – will receive funding more quickly.
- Northern Ireland will benefit from the Corporation Tax
exemption for the Northern Ireland Housing Executive,
Northern Ireland’s biggest landlord.
- Almost half of the £400 million New Deal for Northern
Ireland funding has been allocated, subject to business
cases, to: new systems for supermarkets and small traders
to manage new trading arrangements; building greater
resilience in medicine supply chains; promoting Northern
Ireland’s goods and services overseas; and supporting
skills development.
- £5 million to extend the Tackling Paramilitary
Programme in 2021-22.
|