Treasury Ministers were answering questions in the Commons.
Subjects covered included... Support for Businesses and
Entrepreneurs Cost of Living NHS and Adult Social Care:
Multi-year Funding Plan PFI Contracts Lifetime ISAs
Productivity New Technologies First-time Home
Buyers Tax Credits Overpayments...Request free trial
Treasury Ministers were answering questions in the Commons.
Subjects covered included...
To read any of these in greater detail, click on the link or see
below.
Support for Businesses and Entrepreneurs
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1. What fiscal steps he is taking to support
businesses and entrepreneurs. [905469]
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11. What steps he is taking to support businesses
and entrepreneurs. [905479]
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One year on from the appalling Manchester Arena attack,
I am sure that I speak for everyone in the House in
saying that on this day our thoughts are with those who
lost their lives and their families, and those who
suffered life-changing injuries. We will remember them
with a minute’s silence later today.
The UK’s 5.7 million small businesses make a vital
contribution to our economy, employing 60% of the
private sector workforce, and the Government are
determined to facilitate their success. We are keeping
taxes low and ensuring that firms can access the
support that they need to thrive. Following the patient
capital review, we are expanding the tax reliefs
available to entrepreneurs that will support them in
growing their businesses, and we have launched a
patient capital action plan to unlock £20 billion of
funding to help high-growth firms to reach their
potential.
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Will my right hon. Friend confirm that he will not
raise taxes on small businesses, and will he share with
the House what help the Government will give to
entrepreneurs who are setting up for the first time,
with particular regard to the business rate?
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We have already introduced business rate concessions to
reduce the burden of rates on small businesses,
including by bringing forward by two years the switch
in indexation from the retail prices index to the
consumer prices index. We are ensuring that Britain is
the world’s leading place to start and grow a business,
including through reducing corporation tax rates. There
are almost 7,000 small businesses in Southend-on-Sea
alone, and this Government back them every step of the
way. I can tell my hon. Friend who will raise taxes on
small businesses, and has said so publicly: he is
sitting opposite me.
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In the rural and coastal parts of east Sussex that I
represent, infrastructure delivery is key to bringing
more businesses and entrepreneurs to the area. What
plans does the Chancellor have to continue investment
in road, high-speed rail and broadband connections so
that we can attract more businesses to rural parts of
this country?
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The national productivity investment fund is investing
in all those areas. We have the biggest rail investment
programme since Victorian times and the biggest road
building programme since the 1970s, and we are
investing in superfast broadband, which is critical to
this country’s future. As my hon. Friend will know, in
his area we are investing in the A21, and we are
working with Network Rail on exploring options for
connecting HS1 services to Hastings via Ashford
International.
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Surely the Chancellor knows that the thing holding back
most businesses—small, medium-sized and large—is the
lack of good skilled people to work for them. When is
he going to give the Secretary of State for Education a
good shaking and make him do something about the
apprenticeship levy, apprenticeship schemes and the
higher education graduate apprenticeship scheme?
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The hon. Gentleman is right that skills are a critical
factor for business in an economy with such high levels
of employment and low levels of unemployment as we have
achieved. We are investing in apprenticeships with the
new apprenticeship levy, providing funding for more and
better apprenticeships; we are investing in T-levels,
improving substantially the level of technical training
for 16 to 19-year-olds; and we are reviewing the
operation of tertiary education funding.
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Marks & Spencer is closing 14 stores, affecting
hundreds of jobs, and Debenhams and House of Fraser
would be doing the same were it not for their longer
lease commitments. The nature of the high street is
changing, and the risk is the loss of hundreds of
thousands of jobs. What are the Government doing about
this, and will the Chancellor consider meeting me and
businesses in Croydon as we push ahead for a new
Westfield shopping centre in what is undoubtedly a
difficult environment?
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The hon. Lady correctly identifies the underlying
problem: the nature of retailing is changing. Britain
is leading the world in the adoption of online retail,
which has huge opportunities, but will also bring huge
changes. This is a microcosm of the changes we will
face in this economy over the next 10, 20 or 30 years,
as the digital revolution changes fundamentally the way
we do business. The answer is not to try to resist
change, but to embrace it, and to make sure that we
train our people so that they can take up the new
challenges and have the new opportunities that this
economy will bring.
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20. Microbusinesses are a great British success
story, with thousands of new businesses set up around
people’s kitchen tables, but many are struggling with
regulations and tax changes that are intended to
constrain the actions of big business. Will my right
hon. Friend advise us what steps he is taking to make
sure that he controls regulation and reduces tax
burdens affecting microbusinesses? [905488]
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We have taken steps that I have already outlined this
morning to reduce the burden of taxation on businesses
large and small, although of course small businesses
are most beneficially affected by the £10 billion
programme of reducing business rates costs through the
reduction in corporation tax levels. But we are always
looking for further ways to support the smallest
businesses and to encourage them to become larger
businesses.
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I associate myself with the Chancellor’s remarks about
the Manchester bombing.
For the Chancellor to make up his own small business
tax policies on the hoof is one thing; making them up
for the Labour party is a fantasy. The Government have
ruled out a customs union with the European Union worth
£16 trillion for an alternative customs union with
British overseas territories worth only £22 billion. Is
the Chancellor happy with that decision? Can he give us
any clue about how such a decision will support
businesses and entrepreneurs?
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I do not know whether that was an announcement of a
change in Labour party policy. My understanding is that
the Labour party’s position is to increase corporate
tax rates for small businesses. Perhaps the hon.
Gentleman will tell us whether he has changed his
position.
On the question of our future customs arrangements with
the European Union, the hon. Gentleman will know that I
have consistently sought arrangements that will protect
our existing trade with the European Union, allowing
British businesses to continue to trade freely with the
minimal possible friction at the border with the
European Union. We do not believe it is necessary to be
in a customs union to achieve that.
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For the Chancellor’s information, he can easily find
our policies on www.labour.org.
When the Chancellor met last October to
give a thumbs-up emoji to Mr Cameron’s UK-China
investment fund, presumably to help businesses and
entrepreneurs, was he aware that the fund is to be
domiciled in the Republic of Ireland? If so, did he
think to ask the former Prime Minister whether that was
for the purposes of tax avoidance?
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I have already answered the hon. Gentleman’s questions
about my meeting with Mr Cameron last October. In a
meeting that ranged across a number of issues, Mr
Cameron was good enough to inform me of his intention
to take up this role with a fund promoting investment
both in China and the UK. The Government support all
initiatives that improve trade and investment between
the UK and China.
Cost of Living
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2. What progress the Government have made on
supporting families with the cost of
living. [905470]
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People’s disposable income is now 4.6% higher in real
terms than in 2010. That is because we have turned
around the economy and held taxes down.
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According to recent figures from the Office for
National Statistics, real household disposable income
is £1,600 higher than in 2008, while the proportion of
lower paid workers has fallen to its lowest level for
35 years due to the national living wage. Does my right
hon. Friend think that those statistics would be as
positive if we had taken the advice of the Labour
party?
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As my hon. Friend knows, the advice of the Labour party
is that we need to “overthrow capitalism”. If we were
to do that, there would be fewer businesses, fewer
jobs, higher taxes and higher mortgage rates—and we
would all be queuing for food, as people are in
Venezuela.
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Families with three children are at a greater risk of
poverty than other families, and next year the Chief
Secretary to the Treasury will take £1.2 billion away
from them. Does she agree that this is the least
family-friendly Government in history?
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What we have done for families is make sure that more
parents and families are in work than ever before,
enabling them to look after and support their children.
We are also investing a record amount in childcare—£6
billion a year—to help more parents into work.
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19. Increases in the personal allowance and the
national living wage, and the freeze to fuel duty, have
helped my constituents with the cost of living.
However, things are still tough and too many are just
about managing. What further plans does my right hon.
Friend have to continue to support my hardworking
constituents? [905487]
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My hon. Friend is right that we need to keep taxes
down, but we also need to recognise the role that free
enterprise and free markets play in encouraging
competition, allowing new products to come to the
market and keeping prices low. The reason why we have
low food prices and cheap air fares is because we have
successfully kept those markets open. The Labour party
advocates abandoning that.
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Tory austerity will result in annual social security
cuts of £4 billion in Scotland by 2020. The Institute
for Fiscal Studies estimates that 1 million more
children will be pushed into poverty across the UK.
With planned devolution covering only 15% of social
security spending, the blame lies firmly at the
Chancellor’s door. Does the Minister think that is
acceptable?
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What I find incredible is that the Scottish National
party, which has been in power in Scotland for many
years, presiding over declining education standards and
now raising taxes in Scotland, has the audacity not to
take responsibility for its own policies and actions.
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The Chief Secretary did not answer my question. Once a
fortnight someone comes into my office with so little
income that we have to refer them to a food bank. When
will the Chancellor realise how much harm he is
causing? When will he reverse the cuts and when will he
end the hunger?
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The reality is that we have seen more people in work in
Scotland, as we have across the country, and that is
delivering more real income. We have held taxes down
across the country, to the tune of £1,000 per basic
rate taxpayer, which means that people have more
disposable income to spend.
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Well, that was fascinating.
The Chief Secretary knows full well that 67% of
children in poverty live in working households. The
Child Poverty Action Group expects cuts within
universal credit to push up to 1 million children into
poverty by 2020. When all the Government’s policy
changes are included, lone parents have lost an average
of £5,250 a year since 2010. Families with three or
more children have lost £5,600 a year. Families with a
disabled parent and a disabled child have £6,500 less
every single year. Is she complacent or just callous?
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Surprise, surprise: we have not heard Labour
acknowledge the excellent news from the Resolution
Foundation that we now have the lowest share of
low-paid employees for 35 years—before the Labour
Government were in power. Under Labour, we saw rising
unemployment and more people left on the scrapheap. We
saw a welfare system that did not support people into
work.
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Order. We need to make faster progress. If people could
keep their questions brief, and if answers could focus,
as constitutionally they must, on the policies of the
Government, that would be the proper procedure in the
House. The right hon. Lady is very experienced and I
know she knows that extremely well.
NHS and Adult Social Care: Multi-year Funding Plan
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3. If he will bring forward proposals for a
multi-year funding plan for the NHS and adult social
care. [905471]
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We will come forward with a new long-term plan for the
NHS and provide a new multi-year funding settlement in
support of that plan. What is also important is that we
are developing policies on artificial intelligence and
digital services to make sure that our NHS delivers
better outcomes for patients.
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To raise the amount we need for long-term sustainable
services for my constituents and people across the
country, will the Chief Secretary consider introducing
a ring-fenced health and social care tax that would
bring together spending on both services into a
collective budget?
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As the hon. Lady knows, the problem with such
hypothecated taxes is that if the revenues from them go
down, the consequence is a reduction in support for our
NHS or our social care services. That is why we believe
in funding those services out of general taxation. We
put an extra £6.3 billion into the health service at
the Budget. We are looking at the longer-term
settlement, but it is important to note that this is
about not just the money we spend, but how we spend it.
PFI Contracts
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4. What recent assessment he has made of the
adequacy of his Department’s procedure for authorising
and monitoring private finance initiative
contracts. [905472]
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The vast majority of PFI projects—86%—were signed off
under the last Labour Government. Since 2010, we have
reformed the approach so that PF2—private finance
2—contracts, in the selective circumstances in which
they are used, now deliver better value for money for
the taxpayer, so far delivering over £2 billion of
savings.
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Recent research from the University of Greenwich
suggests that bringing existing PFI contracts back in
house could pay for itself within two years. The
National Audit Office has noted that Government
Departments reported the “operational inflexibility” of
PFI, so can the Chancellor explain why his Department
is still pushing the increasingly discredited and
scandal-ridden PFI model under the disguise of PF2?
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Under the last Labour Government, the average number of
PFI contracts signed per year was 55. In the last two
years, the Treasury has signed off none. We will use
this approach selectively when it delivers a genuine
transfer of risk and provides value for money for the
taxpayer, not as the last Labour Government did.
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As the Minister said, PFI was hugely popular under the
last Labour Government. Will he confirm whether PFI
stands for “private finance initiative” or “pay for
indefinitely”?
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My hon. Friend highlights the cost and legacy of the
PFI projects signed off under the last Labour
Government. Hon. Members can be assured that we will
use this approach wisely and selectively, in particular
for the most complex infrastructure projects requiring
a transfer of risk and the expertise of the private
sector.
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On PFI hospitals, the National Audit Office report
recently found
“no evidence of operational efficiency”,
and that in the NHS,
“the cost of services, like cleaning…hospitals is
higher under PFI contracts.”
Will the Chancellor explain why his Government persist
with imposing higher costs than necessary on local
health budgets instead of ensuring value for money for
the taxpayer?
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I think that the hon. Lady is having amnesia. These
contracts—86% of the contracts and 91% by value—were
signed under the last Labour Government. In respect of
some of the items that she mentioned, such as cleaning
and security services, we have reformed PFI contracts
under PF2 so that those items are not included in the
standard contract.
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Would my hon. Friend be interested to learn that when I
was a lowly Parliamentary Private Secretary in the
Treasury in 1996 and 1997, John Major was constantly
trying to make us finalise PFI contracts, but we in the
Treasury refused because they were bad deals? As soon
as Labour got in, they went straight ahead and entered
into those bad deals.
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My hon. Friend is absolutely right. The initial
intention of PFI was to transfer risk, when
appropriate, to the private sector, and to drive up
innovation and quality in a very small number of
selective cases. That was perverted under the last
Labour Government by .
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We have learned from the experience of PFI; this
Government—[Interruption.]
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Thank you, Mr Speaker.
This Government have not. In the light of last week’s
report on Carillion, we want to know whether the
Minister can indicate which PFI contracts are being
delivered by contractors that are deemed to be actually
or potentially high risk. Following last week’s reports
that failed bidders for PFI contracts will be
compensated, can he rule out bailing out firms that
fail even to win contracts? We need answers on these
questions now, not a history lesson.
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As I have indicated, this Government’s approach to PFI
is entirely different from that of the last Labour
Government. The hon. Lady says that she has learnt the
lessons. Well, it is a pity for the taxpayer, and for
our children and grandchildren, that they were learnt
so late.
Lifetime ISAs
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5. How many people have paid a 25% withdrawal
charge to use their lifetime ISA savings since that
scheme was established. [905473]
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In the first financial year, 2017-18, there was no
unauthorised withdrawal charge in place. The data for
2018-19 is obviously not yet known, but HMRC will
publish it when it is available.
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Will the Minister look at the effect of the withdrawal
charge more closely? A first-time buyer has told me
that he has found a home that suits his needs, but
because his lifetime ISA is less than a year old, he
will not only lose his government bonus but have to pay
a £375 penalty charge back to the Government out of his
own money. Why are aspiring homeowners being penalised
in this way?
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I am of course happy to look at that case. Following my
appearance at the Treasury Select Committee, I asked my
officials to look at the guidance on the website, as I
am anxious not to put misleading advice on there. The
LISA is available for long-term savings. That was the
scheme’s objective when it was set up.
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I am pleased the Minister just mentioned his appearance
before the Select Committee, where we explored the
issue of the 25% charge and the fact that a further 6%
of capital can also be lost. Will he update us? He has
talked to officials about looking at the website. Will
he ensure that the Treasury website is fully compliant
with Financial Conduct Authority rules applicable to
firms in the private sector?
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I am taking this up further, but I am concerned not to
put a misleading flat-rate percentage on there, given
that most savers who make an unauthorised withdrawal
will pay a different amount according to their
circumstances.
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We have junior ISAs, cash ISAs, stocks and shares ISAs
and lifetime ISAs. Will the Minister consider
simplifying the entire ISA system to help young people
in particular with long-term, cost-effective saving?
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The Government have developed a range of savings
products and incentives, or encouraged providers to do
so, to reflect the range of needs. We have also raised
the ISA allowance to £20,000 and introduced the
personal savings allowance, meaning that 95% of people
do not pay any tax on their savings income. It is
important that we have that range of options for all
age groups.
Productivity
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6. What steps he is taking to increase
productivity throughout the UK. [905474]
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7. What fiscal steps his Department is taking to
increase regional productivity. [905475]
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The Budget showed our determination to improve
productivity, increasing the national productivity
investment fund by £8 billion to £31 billion. With
substantial investment in the regions of the UK, such
as the £1.7 billion transforming cities fund, we want
to help all parts of the country achieve their
potential.
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I am sure the House will be united in rejoicing that
the UK’s productivity last year grew by 0.7% and in the
last quarter increased at its quickest pace in six
years. Does my hon. Friend agree that raising our
productivity is the only way to deliver higher-paid and
better jobs for the future?
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I entirely agree with my hon. Friend. Raising
productivity is the only sustainable way to grow the
economy, boost wages and improve living standards,
which is why we have given it such a clear and
determined focus. With respect to Aberdeenshire, the
North sea oil and gas industry is one of those sectors
that have seen the greatest productivity increases in
recent years. We will continue to support that with a
highly competitive tax rate.
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Given that average UK productivity is 30% below German
levels, does the Minister agree it is now time to
rebalance our economy and support further devolution
for areas such as Cheshire and Warrington?
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It was of course this Government who one year ago
created the Mayors across the UK, including in Greater
Manchester, and several of them, including , have had a great
impact on their local economies. I have had
conversations with the leader of the Cheshire and
Warrington local enterprise partnership and the
Minister responsible at the Ministry of Housing,
Communities and Local Government to take such matters
forward.
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23. May I challenge the Government to maintain a
strong emphasis on sound management of the public
finances so we can invest in skills and apprenticeships
to boost productivity and living
standards? [905492]
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My right hon. Friend is absolutely right. It is only
with sound management of the public finances that we
can continue to invest in the skills required to grow
productivity, and that is exactly what we are doing
with increasing investment in apprenticeships, through
the apprenticeship levy, and with the T-levels, which
will be largest change to our secondary education
system since the introduction of A-levels and which we
will be seeing in the coming years.
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15. The unique cross-border region of north Wales
and Cheshire is one of the most dynamic economies in
the United Kingdom. Will the Treasury—which has
promised a north Wales growth deal in, I think, at
least three Budgets, but has yet to deliver a
penny—please stop marking our homework, and give us the
freedom to invest in the economy that we believe
in? [905483]
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We have had numerous conversations with local partners
in north Wales, and with the Welsh Government. I urge
the hon. Gentleman to take the message to the Welsh
Government, but they also need to engage with the UK
Government to secure that important deal, which, as he
says, will link the economy of north Wales with the
north-west and the northern powerhouse to drive
productivity.
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Does the Minister agree that cutting corporation tax to
19% has encouraged business investment, boosting
productivity as well as encouraging the creation of 3
million new jobs?
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My hon. Friend is absolutely right. When we reduce the
tax to 17%, we will see those productivity gains
increase—and, contrary to what the Opposition have
claimed, revenues have increased.
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Eurostat figures show regional inequality in the United
Kingdom, measured by output per hour, to be the worst
in Europe, and the Government have failed to close the
gap since 2010. When will the Chancellor commit himself
to making the investment that is needed to end regional
imbalances that have seen the north of England set to
receive just one fifth of the transport investment per
capita in London?
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The Infrastructure and Projects Authority, which has
conducted the most rigorous analysis of Government
spending on infrastructure, has made clear that the
north of England will receive more funds from the
present Government than any other region in the United
Kingdom, including London and the south-east.
New Technologies
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8. What fiscal steps he is taking to support firms
harnessing new technologies. [905476]
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The Government are committed to helping firms to
harness the benefits of new technologies, and we are
taking action to do so. For example, we have set the
annual investment allowance at £200,000 a year, its
highest-ever permanent level; we have announced a
10-year action plan to unlock more than £20 billion to
finance growth in innovative firms; and we have
delivered the biggest increase in research and
development investment in 40 years.
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Britain is becoming a world leader in technology
businesses at the cutting edge of the fourth industrial
revolution. Will my right hon. Friend ensure that our
tax system remains competitive, to maximise the support
that we give to our business entrepreneurs?
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Yes. I congratulate my hon. Friend on his commitment in
this regard, especially in his role as chairman of the
all-party parliamentary group on the fourth industrial
revolution. Science, research and innovation are areas
in which the UK has huge strengths. Our challenge is to
provide the right environment—including the right tax
environment—to ensure that that potential stays in the
UK, and is developed here. We have introduced a range
of incentives through the tax system, such as R&D
tax credits and entrepreneurs’ relief, as well as the
lowest corporation tax rate in the G7.
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Given that Northern Ireland is the cyber-security
centre of the UK, what steps is the Chancellor taking
to provide tax relief to encourage global businesses to
consider using Belfast and other equipped cities as
their bases?
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We have a globally competitive offer for businesses
seeking to locate in the United Kingdom, and, of
course, Northern Ireland will have corporation tax
flexibilities of its own in due course. However, we
seek to make all parts of the UK attractive to foreign
direct investment, and Northern Ireland has done
extremely well from that.
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Will the Government please explain what is being done
to help firms in places such as west Oxfordshire to
harness 5G and broadband, making them more competitive,
making them raise more money, and creating the capital
that will enable us to fund the public services that
the Labour party wants to overthrow?
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This is partly about public investment and partly about
private investment to encourage the roll-out of
full-fibre broadband technologies and give companies
access to the funds that they need to make investments
and take advantage of the public infrastructure. We
will make further announcements about our forward
broadband strategy during the summer.
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The Scottish Government’s Budget included a 70%
increase in investment in business R&D. To prevent
that investment from being undermined by the
Government’s approach to Brexit, will the Chancellor
commit himself to maintaining the EU levels of R and D
funding beyond the current cycle?
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Once we have left the European Union the money that was
reaching the UK from EU sources will be allocated to
the UK shared prosperity fund, and over the course of
this year we will consult on both the distribution and
the application of those funds and the size that that
fund should be.
First-time Home Buyers
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9. What steps he is taking to support first-time
home-buyers throughout the UK. [905477]
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In the last Budget we abolished stamp duty for
first-time buyers for the first £300,000 of a
property’s value up to £500,000 in total. That has
meant that 95% of first-time buyers have paid less
stamp duty and a full 80% of first-time buyers have
paid no stamp duty at all.
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Last November the Chancellor announced an ambitious
package to tackle the broken housing market. How many
first-time buyers have benefited from that package,
particularly in Essex, and where can people find
further information about this so we can make hopefully
impressive numbers even greater?
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Some 69,000 individuals have already benefited from
this vital tax relief and over 1 million will do so
over the coming five years. We do not have
disaggregated data specifically for Essex, but I can
tell my hon. Friend that within the south-east 12,900
individuals have benefited from first-time buyer tax
relief.
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17. My constituency tops the leader board for
house building, building at the moment over three a
day. Can the Minister give an assessment of how much my
first-time buyers are saving because of the
Government’s policies? [905485]
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As I outlined to my hon. Friend the Member for South
Basildon and East Thurrock (Stephen Metcalfe) who asked
the preceding question, in the south-east 12,900
first-time buyers have benefited from this relief, of
whom 9,000 purchased a property of a value of between
£300,000 and £500,000 in total.
Tax Credits Overpayments
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10. What steps his Department is taking to reduce
the number of tax credits
overpayments. [905478]
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Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs has taken a variety
of steps to reduce overpayments of tax credits
including real-time income data in-year, guidance that
is very clear on these matters, and of course providing
appropriate contact routes with HMRC so that those who
have changed circumstances can indicate that to our tax
authorities.
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Overpayment of tax credits can have disastrous impacts
on families; a constituent of mine has been left with a
bill of £8,000 as a result of purely administrative
errors admitted by HMRC. Such errors can create real
financial hardship and in the past have even pushed
some families into poverty. Will the Minister start
instructing Treasury and HMRC officials to do more to
tackle this problem?
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HMRC is doing a great deal, as I have already outlined
to the hon. Gentleman, in terms of making sure that the
correct information is provided. Overpayments do not
solely emanate from HMRC; there is of course customer
error and there can be negligence or a failure to
report a change of circumstances. But I can assure the
hon. Gentleman that HMRC is always sympathetic and
careful in its approach to anybody in the kind of
situation he described.
Economic Growth
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12. What steps he is taking to support economic
growth. [905480]
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The best way to drive economic growth is to raise our
productivity growth rate. That is why since 2010 the
Government have overseen over half a trillion pounds in
capital investment including in the national
productivity investment fund, have increased investment
in skills and have reduced taxes for business, and I
tell my hon. Friend that the way not to support
economic growth is through more borrowing, more debt
and higher debt service costs.
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After we voted to leave the EU, a vote endorsed by huge
numbers across the north of England, we were told by
some that mismanagement of the economy would occur
under this Government. The reality in the north,
despite those who talk the economy down, is that we
have record employment and some of our areas have the
fastest growing economies in the country, so may I urge
the Chancellor to continue investing in the north and
to ignore those, on the Opposition Benches especially,
who repeatedly talk down the north of England?
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Since 2010 the shadow Chancellor has predicted that the
UK would go into recession on no fewer than eight
separate occasions—that is eight out of zero. But the
UK economy is growing steadily and is now 10.7% bigger
than its pre-crisis level, and the Office for Budget
Responsibility expects it to continue to grow in each
year of its forecast to 2022. While we know that the
shadow Chancellor does not think that a growing economy
matters, let me tell him why I do: a growing economy
means more jobs, more prosperity and more security for
working people.
-
What consideration has been given to the contribution
that varying certain business taxes, such as VAT,
according to the nation or region of the UK could make
to encouraging economic growth?
-
The Government’s view is that a unified rate of VAT
across the United Kingdom is an important part of our
single market of the United Kingdom, which is an
essential economic good for the whole of this country.
-
18. Economic growth in Moray will get a huge boost
when the Moray growth deal is agreed. It has the
support of businesses and communities throughout my
area, and I back it 100%. Will the Chancellor meet me
to discuss the Moray growth deal and the huge benefits
that it will bring to my
constituency? [905486]
-
We absolutely look forward to being able to make
progress on the Moray growth deal, and I am very happy
to meet my hon. Friend. I know that the Exchequer
Secretary, who is dealing with this matter, would also
be pleased to meet him.
-
The Government acknowledge that they want to spread
wealth and economic growth across the United Kingdom
through their industrial strategy. Does the Chancellor
of the Exchequer therefore agree with the Welsh Affairs
Committee, chaired by the hon. Member for Monmouth
(David T. C. Davies), that the money from the cancelled
rail electrification between Cardiff and Swansea should
be spent in Wales, so that we can have that shared
prosperity?
-
As the hon. Gentleman knows, I firmly believe that the
service that will be provided on the route from London
to Swansea will deliver exactly what passengers have
bargained to get, without the need for the disruption
and cost of overhead electrification. We will look at
the funding needs of all parts of the United Kingdom
appropriately, to support economic growth and to reduce
regional disparities.
-
-
Order. The hon. Member for Shrewsbury and Atcham
(Daniel Kawczynski) has question 21, which is not
altogether dissimilar from the one with which we are
dealing, but which will probably not be reached. If he
wants to come in now, he can. If he does not, he need
not do so. But he does, so he will.
-
21. Thank you, Mr Speaker. With regard to
important infrastructure projects such as the
north-west relief road in Shrewsbury, will the
Chancellor give me an assurance that when the land
frees up housing capacity when the road is built, that
will be taken into consideration when the schemes are
apportioned funding? [905489]
-
Especially for the purposes of generating economic
growth.
-
Precisely, Mr Speaker. It is the economic growth
generation potential of housing development that we
will take into account when evaluating transport
proposals. In relation to the specific project to which
my hon. Friend refers, the Exchequer Secretary advises
me that the Department for Transport is eagerly
awaiting a business plan for the project from the
relevant local authority.
-
Does the Chancellor agree that a devolution settlement
for all Yorkshire with an elected Mayor, as supported
by all Conservative councils in the county, could
improve economic growth in the region?
-
The Government will look carefully at proposals from
Yorkshire leaders for a devolution settlement, provided
that it does not undermine the existing South
Yorkshire-Sheffield city region devolution settlement
that has already been established, with a Mayor already
elected.
-
The port operator Associated British Ports, the Hull
and Humber Chamber of Commerce and many local
businesses are giving serious consideration to free
port status for the Humber ports in the post-Brexit
world. Will the Chancellor or his Ministers agree to
meet representatives of the business community in the
area and to give serious consideration to this proposal
when the idea has been further developed?
-
As my hon. Friend will know, the Chief Secretary to the
Treasury has a great interest in that proposal. Without
even needing to consult her, I can say without
hesitation that she will be delighted to meet him and
his colleagues.
Wage Growth: Young People
-
13. What assessment he has made of trends in the
level of wage growth for young people over the last 15
years. [905481]
-
From 2002 until the crisis, young people saw their real
wages grow more slowly than the UK average. In fact,
their wages fell more during the recession. Since 2014,
young people’s wages have been rising faster than the
UK average.
-
Young people are struggling to get a good start in the
job market. They are earning less, working longer hours
and commuting further than their parents’ generation.
What are the Government going to do to transform their
outcomes?
-
The most important thing is that those young people are
in jobs, and under Labour we saw unemployment rise to
20%. Youth unemployment has reduced by 40% since 2010.
I recognise that we need to see those young people get
better skills. That is why we are investing in IT
training, that is why we are developing the maths
premium so that more students study science,
technology, engineering and maths, and that is why we
have developed the apprenticeship levy to get more
people into apprenticeships.
Money Laundering and Criminal Finance
-
14. What recent estimate the Government have made
of the cost to the economy of money laundering and
criminal finance in the UK. [905482]
-
The social and economic costs of organised crime, of
which money laundering is a key facilitator, total tens
of billions of pounds a year. The Government are
committed to tackling illicit finance in the UK and
have implemented recent measures including the Criminal
Finances Act 2017 and the updated money laundering
regulations, both of which were brought into law in the
past year.
-
The cross-party Foreign Affairs Committee said only
yesterday that the Government should show stronger
political leadership in tackling the importing of dirty
money into the United Kingdom. Is it not time that the
Government supported the Labour Front Bench’s proposals
for an overseas register of interests?
-
I acknowledge the report of the Select Committee. This
Government stand by the rule of law. We do not do
random confiscations but, alongside the work being
undertaken, work is under way across Whitehall to
examine what further steps are necessary. I am eager
that we go as far as we can, and we must do so in ways
that are consistent with our values.
-
I associate myself with the Chancellor’s eloquent words
on the Manchester tragedy. I also commend the emergency
services that operated on that day.
“The Government cannot afford to turn a blind eye as
kleptocrats and human rights abusers use the City of
London to launder their ill-gotten funds”.
Not my words but the words of yesterday’s Foreign
Affairs Committee report. For eight years this
Government have turned a blind eye to the flow of dirty
money through the City. Not only have they delayed
until 2021 the introduction of a full public register
of overseas companies that own UK property but they
have refused to introduce the tougher scrutiny and
regulation of City flotations that we have demanded,
and they have failed to broaden the definition of
“politically exposed persons” to include more
individuals linked to crime or criminal regimes.
Will the Government do as the Foreign Affairs Committee
has demanded and start taking money laundering and tax
avoidance seriously by bringing forward the date for
the register of overseas companies that own property in
the UK?
-
We will continue to take these matters very seriously.
We will freeze Russian state assets where we have
evidence that they will be used to threaten the life or
property of UK nationals and residents. As the Prime
Minister made very clear in her statement to the House,
the National Crime Agency will bring all UK
capabilities to bear against serious criminals and
corrupt elites. As somebody who has experienced that
directly in my constituency in recent months, I stand
by the Prime Minister’s statement. There is no place
for these people and their money in our country.
-
That is just not good enough. We were promised a
register in 2015, and we are still having to wait
another three years. The Government are letting the
crooks, the tax avoiders and the money launderers off
the hook again. They have failed to introduce and
enforce stricter due diligence for companies as
registered companies, they have failed to take on the
service providers that set up these laundering scheme,
and they have refused to legislate to create a new
offence of failing to prevent money laundering. Those
are all amendments that the Opposition tabled to the
recent Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering Bill. The
people of this country are entitled to ask why this
Government are soft on tax evaders and money
launderers.
There is another issue that has to be addressed today,
as highlighted by the allegations against Lycamobile.
Will the Government bring forward legislation requiring
any political party found to have accepted donations
from money launderers and tax evaders to forfeit or
return that money?
-
Obviously, it is impossible for a Minister to comment
on live cases, but we will continue to use powers to
disrupt and pursue money launderers and terrorists. We
will use the anti-corruption strategy, and my right
hon. Friend the Minister for Security and Economic
Crime is committed to using the National Economic Crime
Centre to pursue those who need pursuing, but we will
do so within the rule of law, consistent with the
values of this country.
Tax Evasion
-
16. What steps he has taken to give Her Majesty’s
Revenue and Customs the appropriate powers and
resources to tackle tax evasion. [905484]
-
The Government have brought in more than 100 measures
to clamp down on tax avoidance, evasion and
non-compliance since 2010, and the associated powers
that HMRC has had in that respect. We have protected
and brought in £175 billion across that period, which
is substantially more than we invest in our national
health service every year.
-
Almost 15,000 HMRC and Valuation Office Agency jobs
have been lost since 2010, and that is alongside tax
office closures up and down the country. With potential
changes to our customs border on the horizon, does the
Chancellor not agree that now would be the time to
invest in HMRC, and put a stop to all planned cuts and
closures?
-
I am pleased to be able to inform the hon. Lady that we
have been investing heavily in HMRC to clamp down on
the issues she has raised—we are talking about some £2
billion since 2010. We have 23,000 staff in HMRC
engaged in that purpose and we consequently have about
the lowest tax gap in the entire world, at 6%, which is
far lower than it was in any year under the previous
Labour Government.
Topical Questions
-
T1. If he will make a statement on his departmental
responsibilities. [905495]
-
My principal responsibility is to ensure economic
stability and the continued prosperity of the British
people, and I will do so by building on the plans set out
in the autumn Budget and the spring statement. The
Government’s balanced approach to the public finances
enables us to give households, businesses and our public
services targeted support in the near term, and to invest
in the future of this country, while also being fair to
the next generation by at last beginning to reduce a
national debt that is far too large.
-
On prosperity, Mark Carney has just said that household
incomes are now about £900 lower than was forecast in May
2016, before the referendum. How much lower still does
the Chancellor estimate household incomes will be when
the UK leaves the customs union and the single market?
When will he publish his analysis?
-
On the publication of Government analysis, I have made it
clear on several occasions that once Parliament is being
asked to vote on a proposal—on a package—it will be
appropriate for the Government to publish the analysis
that they have, to make sure that that debate is as
informed as possible. The future trajectory of household
incomes will depend, in part, on the quality of the deal
we negotiate as we exit the EU, and we are focused on
getting the very best deal for British jobs, British
prosperity and British businesses.
-
T2. Much champagne, or, in the more discerning
households, English or Welsh sparkling wine, was drunk at
the weekend, so what is the Chancellor doing financially
to help promote and expand this excellent domestic wine
industry? Post Brexit, will he address the anomaly
whereby fizz is taxed more than still wine, which has a
higher alcohol volume? [905496]
-
I know that my hon. Friend represents some of the finest
English sparkling wine vineyards, and I am pleased to say
that some new ones have recently opened in Norfolk. We
now have record exports of more than £100 million a year
of our fantastic sparkling wine and we will continue to
look at our policies to promote this brilliant product.
-
T9. Contrary to the out-of-touch outlook presented
by the hon. Member for Brigg and Goole (Andrew Percy),
Eurostat figures show regional inequality in the UK,
measured in output per hour, to be the worst in Europe.
There is a massive disparity across England, with
households in the south-east, the richest area of the UK,
having more than double the wealth of those in the
north-east, where my constituency is. When will the
Treasury finally act to meaningfully tackle this ongoing
injustice? [905503]
-
The hon. Lady focuses rightly on output per hour. The
problem is a productivity gap between the regions of the
UK and the most prosperous areas of London. We have to
close that productivity gap. That is in the interest of
not only those individual regions, but our overall
national economy. We will do so by investing in public
infrastructure and in skills, and by ensuring that the
conditions are right for business investment, both
domestic and foreign.
-
T3. I have a constituent who, despite having ample
equity in her home and never having been in arrears with
her payments, is unable to extend her mortgage beyond the
age of 75 because of Government rules. That means that
she will have to sell the house that she loves. Will my
hon. Friend look urgently at whether those rules are
absolutely necessary? [905497]
-
Lenders are not restricted from extending mortgages
beyond the age of 75, as long as the consumer can
demonstrate affordability. Several lenders are currently
looking into this issue. There is considerable merit in
interest-only retirement mortgages.
-
What action are the Government taking to tackle payroll
and umbrella companies, some of which—not all—are used to
perpetuate bogus self-employment and undermine terms and
conditions?
-
We are looking very closely at this policy area, not
least in respect of the review of the
different ways in which individuals choose to work. The
Government’s overriding objective is to make sure that
the way an individual works is reflected in the way they
are taxed, and that they are taxed properly.
-
T4. Some of my constituents have reported ongoing
confusion about child benefit. Some who admit that they
have claimed child benefit inadvertently have not been
told of the money that they owe to HMRC until interest
has accumulated for as long as five years. What more can
HMRC do to communicate errors more
quickly? [905498]
-
My hon. Friend raises an important point. I can reassure
him that HMRC has written to a total of 800,000 people to
inform them of the issue he has raised, which is also set
out and made clear on the very first page of the child
benefit application form. I can also reassure him that we
will review this policy area in the current period to see
how we can make changes going forward.
-
T6. The Royal Bank of Scotland branch in Wick in my
constituency has now closed, and a sad sight that is.
Last week, we heard that the Homebase branch is also to
close. The Chancellor may say that we have to accept
change and live with it, but these are hammer blows for a
community such as Wick, and I begin to wonder when we
will see tumbleweed blowing down the street. Does the
Chancellor agree that we should carry out some kind of
assessment of the impact of such closures on the local
economies of places like Wick and Caithness, before it is
too late? [905500]
-
It is a matter for banks to make commercial decisions on
the basis of their assessments, and there are rules on
how they inform the affected constituents. I am, though,
very concerned about the situation in rural and sparsely
populated areas. I shall visit Scotland over the summer
recess to address some of the issues that the hon.
Gentleman has raised.
-
T5. I welcomed the Treasury’s recently closed
consultation on single-use plastics. Will my hon. Friend
update the House on what his Department intends to do
next to tackle this problem? [905499]
-
Sadly, it is a rare day on which a Treasury call for
evidence on tax stirs the enthusiasm of the general
public, but this one has. We received a record 130,000
submissions from throughout the country. We are
determined to take the issue seriously and to tackle the
scourge of single-use plastics. The Chancellor has been
clear that we want to do so in a way that both tackles
the environmental issues and drives innovation to support
the jobs of the future.
-
I am sure that Ministers will be just as concerned as the
rest of us about the startling revelations about the
conduct of Lloyds and HBOS outlined in the Project
Turnbull report. Will the Treasury now demand that, after
three years, the Financial Conduct Authority pulls its
finger out to expedite its investigation into this
matter? Has the Treasury received any requests from
police authorities to fund appropriate investigations
into criminal activities? If so, will it look favourably
on them?
-
The hon. Gentleman rightly points out that the events at
HBOS in Reading constituted criminal activity. As such,
it was right that those responsible were brought to
justice. He referred to a report by an internal employee;
that matter should be taken seriously by the FCA and is
being taken seriously by Lloyds, and it will be followed
up on in due course.
-
-
I am very keen to accommodate Back Benchers, as always.
-
T7. Will my right hon. Friend tell the House how
much additional tax revenue has been secured since 2010
by Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs through tackling
avoidance, evasion and non-compliance, and will he
confirm that this policy will continue to exist in the
Government? [905501]
-
I am very pleased to inform my hon. Friend that we have
raised and protected £175 billion since 2010 by clamping
down on evasion, avoidance and non-compliance. That comes
as a direct result of investing in HMRC to the tune of £2
billion, and has resulted in the lowest tax gap in the
world.
-
-
Colleagues can help each other by being very brief, which
I am sure they will be.
-
With child poverty set to increase by another 1.5 million
by 2022, according to the Economic Council for Equality,
what will the Treasury be doing to help the very poorest
households?
-
What we have seen in the past few years, since 2015, is a
7% rise in the real wages of people on the lowest
incomes, and a reduction in income inequality.
-
T8. With the full phasing in of the residents’
nil-rate band for inheritance tax by 2020, a couple will
potentially be able to leave £1 million free of
inheritance tax to descendants. That is all very welcome,
but having worked through the legislation in a real
example, it seems unduly complex. Will my right hon.
Friend now consider simplifying the law to make the
overall IHT allowance a simple, no-nonsense £500,000 each
and remove the complexity of the residents’ nil-rate band
rules? [905502]
-
My hon. Friend talks about complexity. The Office for Tax
Simplification is looking into the way in which
inheritance tax and the regime operate. Changing the way
that tax reliefs operate in the way that he describes
would add very significant cost. However, we do, of
course, keep all taxes under review.
-
The TUC estimates that the number of working households
in poverty has risen by 1 million since 2010. Inaction on
low-paid, insecure work and punitive welfare reform
measures have led to record numbers of people accessing
food banks. A responsible Government would measure food
insecurity to create policies that end hunger. My Food
Insecurity Bill does that. Why will the Government not
back it?
-
We are the Government who have introduced the national
living wage. We have reduced tax bills for those on the
lowest incomes, and we are keeping our food market
competitive and have some of the lowest food prices in
Europe.
-
The UK productivity and prosperity funds are meant to
benefit all local authorities across the United Kingdom.
Will my right hon. Friend meet me to talk about how
Scottish local authorities can apply directly to those
funds?
-
-
The cap on charges on payday loans legislated for by
Parliament has made a huge difference in bringing down
the costs, but it is now more expensive for a person to
go into an unarranged overdraft at their own bank. Will
the Government look to extend that legislation to cap
also the rip-off fees and charges put on customers by our
banks?
-
The hon. Lady makes a very sound point. The FCA is
looking into four aspects of that. It is reporting next
week, and I look forward to hearing what it has to say.
-
In the autumn statement, the Chancellor announced the
extension of the railcard from age 26 to 30. When will my
constituents be able to take advantage of that?
-
A pilot railcard for that age group was launched as a
trial, and was fully subscribed very quickly. The
Department for Transport will be announcing in due course
when the continuation of the scheme will take place.
-
As the Minister knows, the communities that I represent
in Carmarthenshire received the highest form of EU
structural aid. Will he give a guarantee that they will
not lose a single penny following the introduction of the
UK Shared Prosperity Fund?
-
As I think I have already said earlier in this session,
we will be consulting, during the course of this year, on
the design of the UK Shared Prosperity Fund, the scope
and scale of the fund and how the money in the fund
should be allocated. I look forward to the hon.
Gentleman’s input to that consultation.
-
Research has shown that those who live in rural areas are
getting hit harder at the fuel pump than those in urban
areas. Can my right hon. Friend update me on what his
Department is doing to ensure that motorists in Angus,
and indeed across the United Kingdom, have their taxes
cut?
-
I am clearly not going to speculate about future tax
changes from the Dispatch Box this morning, but I point
out that we have frozen fuel duty for eight successive
years at a cost to the Exchequer of over £40 billion.
-
A Home Affairs Committee report published in summer 2016
found that the suspicious activity reporting system
intended for use by the banks to crack down on money
laundering was not fit for purpose. The Committee
demanded immediate reform, but the Government stated that
they would implement the reforms only by 2018. In the
light of the Foreign Affairs Committee report on Russia,
criminal financing and the UK, will the Minister
immediately bring forward plans to reform and improve the
system, as was recommended two whole years ago?
-
I refer the hon. Gentleman to the response I gave
earlier. The Government are taking forward a range of
options, but I will examine the issue he raises and write
to him.
-
The people of Bloxwich will soon be hearing more about
blockchain. Will the Chancellor confirm that the
Government will continue to invest in this innovative
technology to keep the public’s data safe?
-
Sounds fascinating, and I think we are going to hear more
about it.
-
The Government are committed to exploring all
technologies that will keep data safe and create
opportunities for innovation. Blockchain is one such
technology, but the Government will also be examining
other even more innovative distributive ledger
technologies.
-
I look forward to learning more about blockchain. I am
uninitiated on the matter, as the hon. Member for Walsall
North (Eddie Hughes) can tell, but I feel sure that he
will put me in the picture erelong.
-
The Governor of the Bank of England has stated that
economic uncertainty caused by the Brexit vote will knock
5% off wage growth and is costing the UK economy £10
billion a year. Does the Chancellor agree with the
Governor?
-
We have not yet concluded our negotiations with the
European Union, so it is impossible to make any
assessment of the impact of our departure until we know
what the future relationship with the EU will be. This
Government’s agenda is to get the best possible deal for
Britain that protects jobs, prosperity and businesses, so
that we can protect our existing trade with the EU as
well as build new trade opportunities beyond Europe.
-
-
The hon. Member for Lichfield (Michael Fabricant) need
not worry; I am perfectly clear that he wishes to give us
his thoughts. I am saving him up. It would be a pity to
squander him at too early a stage of our proceedings.
-
Today’s figures from the Office for National Statistics
reveal that we are at the lowest level of public
borrowing since 2006. Will the Chief Secretary to the
Treasury set out what that will mean for future
investment in public services, as opposed to maxing out
paying off the nation’s credit card?
-
My hon. Friend is right that we have successfully turned
the economy around. We have brought the deficit down, and
next year—for the first time in many years—we will see
debt fall as a proportion of GDP—[Interruption.] Some
Members are laughing, but the same people are proposing
that we increase our debt by half a trillion pounds and
push our country into penury.
-
What will ministers do to support the “Great Western
Cities” initiative, which promotes collaboration between
Bristol, Newport and Cardiff and has enormous potential
for the wider region?
-
We are already engaging with that important initiative.
We continue to support the Mayor of the West of England
in Bristol, and we are investing over £600 million
through the Swansea and Cardiff city deals.
-
Manufacturing accounts for 24% of the west midlands
economy but, as others pointed out earlier, there are
skills shortages. Will the Chancellor therefore support
any bid from the Mayor of the West Midlands for a
devolution deal to take over responsibility for skills
from the Department for Education?
-
I am tempted to wonder whether my hon. Friend might have
discussed that question with the Mayor of the West
Midlands before asking it. It would be remiss of me to
stand at the Dispatch Box and say that I would accept any
bid, but I am certainly willing to consider any proposals
from the Mayor of the West Midlands, or from any other
elected mayor, to address the skills challenge that we
face across the country.
-
Several of my constituents who are highly skilled
migrants made entirely legitimate and timely changes to
their tax returns and are now facing removal by the Home
Office under immigration rule 322(5). Will a Treasury
Minister confirm that people should make entirely
legitimate changes to their tax returns? Will they also
have a conversation with their Home Office colleagues to
prevent these highly skilled contributors from being
removed from the UK?
-
The answer to the hon. Lady’s question is that people
should clearly continue to make appropriate changes to
their tax returns. I reassure her and the House that
Treasury Ministers and HMRC officials are working closely
across Government—particularly with the Home Office—on
the issues that she raised in order to ensure that we get
these matters right.
-
The Government have decided not to proceed with the
legislation that they committed to bring forward to
protect consumers from the rip-off practice of logbook
loans, despite the Bill being prepared and ready to go
through the accelerated procedure. Will the Minister
explain why he is prepared to allow innocent buyers to
continue to be exploited through this outdated, misused
legislation?
-
The FCA is looking at a range of options, but I would be
happy to meet the hon. Lady to discuss her concerns on
this matter as soon as possible.
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