Showing posts with label hmt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hmt. Show all posts

Monday, 27 July 2009

Report of Insurance Industry Working Group


The Insurance Industry Working Group (IIWG) today published its report into the medium and long-term challenges facing the insurance industry

The group was set up in October 2008 to look at the challenges and opportunities facing the UK Insurance Industry. It is co-chaired by Chancellor of the Exchequer, Alistair Darling and Andrew Moss, Group Chief Executive of Aviva and includes leading figures from across the insurance sector. Its findings will be reported to the Chancellor's High-Level Group on City Competitiveness, which will meet later this year.

The report sets out a Vision for the UK insurance industry in 2020 as the leading global insurance centre with an unsurpassed reputation for excellence, a deep and constructive relationship with its customers and a close and effective partnership with Government.

The report recommends:

· Action from the insurance industry, Government and the FSA to increase customer confidence and trust through improving financial education and considering further steps to improve transparency, simplicity and access for consumers.

· A partnership between the insurance industry and Government to better manage risk in society and to explore options to increase savings and protection provision. For example Government and industry should consider sharing data and research findings that can help efforts to reduce the likely impact of different risks, such as flood risk and crime.

· Work to help consumers manage financial distress, building on the Government’s financial capability initiatives. The insurance industry should work with Government to assess the scope for a greater industry role, where it is commercially viable, such as helping people with the need for a retirement income and help with long term care.

· Encouraging capital flows into the UK insurance industry by ensuring its competitive position in the global marketplace is maintained and enhanced.

Alistair Darling said:
“The insurance industry is a vital part of the UK economy, employing around a third of all people who work in financial services and managing almost £1.5 trillion in assets. While the industry has fared well relative to other financial sectors in the face of the global financial crisis, it is facing the challenge of an increasingly competitive global market. I welcome the industry’s commitment to work in partnership with Government to improve confidence in insurance products, enhance financial capability and further build the competitiveness of this key British industry."

Andrew Moss said:
“The insurance industry makes a great contribution to the UK economy. Taking forward the recommendations in this report will create a stronger partnership between Government and the industry, which is essential to help people manage the risks of everyday life. There is a real desire for better customer engagement through greater financial education and awareness, improved accessibility and transparency of products and a need to attract capital to the UK insurance industry. Taking steps now will build customer confidence and deliver our vision to become the world’s leading insurance centre.”

Monday, 11 May 2009

(HMT) Government to strengthen resolution arrangements for investment banks


Financial Services Secretary Paul Myners today published a report setting out the Government's initial thinking on reforms to strengthen the UK's ability to deal with the failure of an investment bank.

Like other financial centres, London was affected by the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008 and the events that followed. The Government is committed to implementing reforms that will enable an easier resolution of a failing investment bank should any such event happen again.

The report outlines the Government's thinking on the changes to market practice, regulation, and insolvency law that might be needed to deal with any future failue of a major investment bank.

The report considers the treatment of investment banking clients after default, the future of their assets, and the treatment of their open or unreconciled trading positions. It also examines what can be done to make the process of insolvency more effective, and to limit the damage that may be done by a failing investment bank.

These reforms are part of a package of steps aimed at renewing the financial services sector, other aspects of which will be laid out in the Government's forthcoming paper on financial regulation.

The reforms which are considered in this report demonstrate the Government's commitment both to financial stability, and to the future of London as a global investment banking hub.

Commenting on the report, Paul Myners said:
"The UK's insolvency regime is an important aspect of its attractiveness as an international centre for investment banking. The Government is committed to maintaining these advantages and strengthening the existing solvency regime."

Wednesday, 22 April 2009

(HMT) Budget statement to the House of Commons, delivered by the Rt hon Alistair Darling MP, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Wednesday 22 April 2009


Mr Deputy Speaker, today's Budget will continue to help people through this global recession, and prepare Britain for the opportunities of the future.

Firstly, there will be help now to get people back into work quickly, and support businesses and homeowners facing problems.

Secondly, there will be measures to support investment in the growth and green industries of the future - while, as the recovery takes hold, ensure our public finances are sustainable.

We will protect investment in schools, hospitals and other key public services - and we will work to rebuild our financial services.

Taken together, this Budget will build on the strengths of the British economy and its people, speed the recovery, providing jobs and spreading prosperity.

In all of these decisions, we have been guided by our core values of fairness and opportunity - and our determination to invest and grow our way out of recession.

Mr Deputy Speaker, today's Budget will take Britain through the most serious global economic turmoil for over 60 years.

The impact is being felt in every continent, country and community.

When the world economy was plunged into deep crisis in the 1930s, the response, both nationally and internationally, was too little and too late.

This failure to act turned a serious downturn into a prolonged depression.

We will not repeat those mistakes again.

This time, we and other countries, have worked to avoid them.

Across the globe, we have seen decisive action by national governments, and internationally too.

This action, taken promptly and decisively, gives us good grounds for confidence.

Mr Deputy Speaker, today's Budget builds on the substantial help for people and businesses in the Pre-Budget Report in November.

It builds on the steps we have taken to recapitalise and restore confidence in our financial institutions.

And it builds on the outcome of the G20 Summit in London this month, when the world's leading economies came together to agree unprecedented co-ordinated action to speed global recovery.

The action already taken here, and internationally, and the measures I will announce today, mean that I expect the economy to start growing again towards the end of the year.

I am also confident that, as the global economy recovers to double in size over the next 20 years, Britain can, and will be, a world leader.

This Budget will help make sure we seize this opportunity.

Mr Deputy Speaker, as I told the House in November, we and other countries have been battling against a succession of shocks which have hit the world economy.

At the end of 2007, problems in international mortgage markets began to put a damaging squeeze on credit.

In early 2008, we also saw dramatic volatility in many commodities prices, adding to uncertainty and putting pressure on growth.

Last autumn, the dramatic failure of one of the top investment banks in America - Lehman Brothers - shattered already fragile confidence and brought the international financial system to its knees.

Since then, an extraordinary international financial crisis has fed into the wider economy, causing a steep and widespread world recession.

A crisis that started in the developed economies has spread to emerging and developing countries.

Industrial production has fallen and unemployment is rising - by 5 million in the US alone.

In the last few months, world trade fell - and while our exports are down 14 per cent, exports in Germany are down 21 per cent, in China 26 per cent, and in Japan 45 per cent.

For the first time since the Second World War, the world economy is expected to contract this year.

Mr Deputy Speaker, the last few months have seen considerable economic uncertainty.

And that has fully justified the action we, and other countries, have taken to support business and people.

Since the autumn, we have put the banks on a stronger footing, cleaning up their balance sheets, and helping boost bank lending.

As a result, banks will be able to lend billions of pounds more this year and next, to homebuyers and businesses.

Getting credit flowing again is the essential precondition to economic recovery.

In the Pre-Budget Report, I announced a range of measures to help the country through the recession, putting £20bn back into the economy.

This help is coming through now - from an income tax cut, and a VAT reduction which will continue until December.

There is increased support for pensioners, as well as investment in vital public services and accelerated capital projects - protecting thousands of jobs.

And because of the reforms we have made to the welfare system since 1997, this comes on top of extra help when families need it most.

I understand the anxiety behind calls to support those whose wages have fallen.

This is exactly the support our flexible system can - and is - already offering.

As shorter working weeks or irregular patterns reduce wages, those on tax credits can see an automatic increase to compensate for the loss of income.

In March, for example, 355,000 families were receiving on average £35 a week more support through tax credits.

Demonstrating how our welfare system automatically helps people when they need it most.

Mr Deputy Speaker, fiscal support has been complemented with sharp reductions in interest rates by central banks around the world.

The Bank of England interest rate is now down to half a per cent, the lowest it has ever been.

This has reduced the cost of mortgages and loans.

The average saving, since October, for the 4-1/2 million families with tracker mortgages is over £230 a month.

And we have now given the Bank of England new means to support the flow of credit and put money into the economy.

Inflation has come down which means people's income will go further.

Taken together, the total policy support for the UK economy is expected to protect up to half a million jobs.

Other governments across the world have been doing the same.

The total amount of fiscal support, across the G20, will amount to over 5 trillion dollars.

Mr Deputy Speaker, there's also been unprecedented co-ordinated action at an international level.

The G20 group of economies came together - first in November and then in London earlier this month - to fight this global recession.

We agreed to take whatever further measures are necessary to deliver the IMF forecast of global growth of over 2 per cent by the end of next year.

In total, the G20 agreed over one trillion dollars of additional support for the world economy.

Mr Deputy Speaker, there are no quick fixes. No overnight solutions.

But because of the progress we have made, here and internationally, we can begin to restore confidence, save jobs, and bring the world economy more quickly out of recession.

Now we must make sure we deliver on these agreements - starting at the meeting of world finance ministers in Washington this week.

And I want the next meeting of EU finance ministers to be focused on rebuilding growth in Europe, based on the foundations laid by the G20.

We also need a clear path to recovery - both fiscally and by investing to build Britain's future.

Mr Deputy Speaker, the UK went into this global recession with employment at an all-time high, inflation, public debt and interest rates at low levels.

But no country can insulate itself from this worldwide downturn.

The position here, as in every country, deteriorated in the autumn.

In the last few months, world trade fell at the sharpest rate since 1945.

As an open economy, the world's sixth biggest exporter of goods and the second largest exporter of services, we are affected by the collapse in demand in other countries.

The unexpected severity of the recession has led the IMF to downgrade its own forecasts for the world economy three times since October.

We, as well as other countries as diverse as Japan and France, India and the US, have reduced our growth estimates.

Mr Deputy Speaker, the UK economy contracted by 1.6 per cent in the last quarter of 2008.

For the first quarter of this year, I expect the economy will again contract by a similar amount.

And my forecast for GDP growth for the year as a whole will be -3-1/2 per cent - in line with other independent forecasts.

But because of our underlying strength, the measures we are taking, domestically and internationally, I expect to see growth resume towards the end of the year.

The IMF forecasts published today confirm the problems that all countries will face this year.

But they also show that the British economy will suffer less than Germany, less than Japan, less than Italy, and less than the euro area as a whole this year.

The British economy is diverse, flexible and resilient - which is why we can be confident in recovery.

Next year, because of the pick up in world demand, the continuing benefit of lower prices, and the substantial recovery measures put in place, I am forecasting growth of 1-1/4 per cent in 2010.

In future, the sources of our growth will be more varied - and we need to ensure we play to our country's strengths.

It will increasingly come from an expansion in investment by businesses in the industries of the future, such as low-carbon, advanced manufacturing and communications.

These industries, together, are as important to the British economy as the financial services sector.

That is why it has been so important that we have increased investment in Britain's science base by 88 per cent in real terms over the last ten years.

Growth will also be driven by the opportunities to export as the global economy doubles in size in the next two decades.

From 2011, I am forecasting that the economy will continue to recover, with growth of 3-1/2 per cent from then on.

To account for the impact of the global shock, I have further adjusted trend output - or the productive potential of the economy.

But in future years, the economy will recover towards a trend rate of growth of around 2-3/4 per cent.

Inflation is expected to continue coming down sharply, reaching 1 per cent by the end of this year.

I am today writing to the Governor of the Bank of England, in the usual way, to confirm that the inflation target remains unchanged at 2 per cent.

Retail Price Index inflation is forecast to remain negative, falling to -3 per cent by September, before moving back above zero next year.

Mr Deputy Speaker, the deepening global recession has had an impact on the public finances, here and in every country across the world.

In this Budget, I will set out steps to ensure they are on a sustainable path.

And due to the measures that I will announce today, the current deficit is expected to halve within four years.

But before I turn to that, I want to set out the additional help we will give to people and businesses to get through the recession - and build towards recovery.

Mr Deputy Speaker, we know, from previous recessions, that people's greatest fears are the loss of their job and their family home.

All over the world, as the economy slows, unemployment is rising.

In the UK, the claimant count increased in February by 137,000.

Today's figure shows that in March it went up by 74,000 - taking the total claimant unemployment rate to 4.5 per cent.

It is not in any Government's power to prevent all job losses.

And even when the recovery is under way, it will take time for unemployment to start falling.

But Governments must give people targeted help to find a new job as quickly as possible - and, where necessary, to gain the new skills which will allow them to do this.

This is not just morally the right thing to do but economically essential.
All the evidence shows that the longer people are out of work, the more difficult it becomes for them to re-enter the labour market.

So today I will announce steps to ensure short-term job loss does not turn into a lifetime on benefits.

Mr Deputy Speaker, the core of the Government's approach is the Job Centre Plus network.

Its tailored help has almost halved the average time people spend out of work compared to previous recessions.

Even in the tough economic conditions since November, it has helped over a million people move into new employment.

Mr Deputy Speaker, I am determined that this support can continue to be given to people who lose their jobs.

In November, I increased the resources for Job Centre Plus and the New Deal by £1.3bn.

I can announce today an additional £1.7bn of funding so that everyone can receive high-quality support.

Most people, even now, continue to find work within a matter of weeks.

But we need to step up help to those who have greater difficulty in re-entering the labour market.

So there will be additional support for people who have been out of work for 12 months through the Flexible New Deal.

I am also determined that we do even more to protect young people from the damaging impact of long-term unemployment.

The alternative is a return to the days when a whole generation of young people found themselves abandoned to a future on the scrapheap.

We will not repeat that mistake.

So I want to offer a guarantee. From January, everyone under the age of 25, who has been out of work for 12 months, will be offered a job or a place in training.

Those in work will receive a wage.

Those in training will receive additional money on top of their benefits.

To provide these extra opportunities, we are working with employers to create or support as many as 250,000 jobs.

This will include delivering local services, traineeships in social care, and other high demand sectors - as well as jobs for people of all ages in particularly badly hit communities.

Mr Deputy Speaker, I also want to do more to help people gain the crucial skills that will be needed in the future.

So, as part of my guarantee to young people, I will spend over £260m of new money, for training and subsidies to help them get the skills or experience needed in sectors with strong future demand.

We will also be providing extra investment, to ensure we deliver on our guarantee that every 16 and 17 year old who wants to stay in education or training can do so.

To deliver this for the next two years, I am providing a further £250m this year and £400m in 2010-11.

This will enable an additional 54,000 places, in sixth forms and further education colleges, for students in the next academic year.

For this and other measures, there will be consequential provisions, where appropriate, for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Mr Deputy Speaker, I will shortly set out long-term measures in housing and for business to build the recovery.

But I first want to set out how we can offer more support now in these areas.

One of the biggest fears when people lose their jobs, is that they, and their family, will also lose their homes.

I want to do more to reduce the number of repossessions.

Last year, I increased and extended the Support for Mortgage Interest scheme, which covers mortgage interest payments for people who have lost their jobs.

Today I can announce that I will maintain the higher level of support for a further 6 months to help homeowners as they look for a new job.

That is in addition to the scheme to help people stay in their homes if their income falls.

The housing market is also being held back by a lack of mortgage credit.

The Government has taken action to encourage an increase in mortgage lending - and this year, the major UK banks will increase the availability of mortgages by around £20bn.

To build on this, today I can announce the introduction, following state aid approval, of the scheme to guarantee securities backed by mortgages - which will help to ease the flow of mortgage finance.

Mr Deputy Speaker, the recession and the credit crunch have made it much harder for people to take their first step up the housing ladder.

This is not just difficult for those involved - but also undermines the entire housing market.

So, to help, I have decided to extend the Stamp Duty holiday on properties sold for less than £175,000 until the end of the year.

Sixty per cent of residential properties will continue to be exempt - encouraging modest and middle income homebuyers.

I can also announce an £80m extension to HomeBuy Direct - the Government shared equity mortgage scheme, which has already received interest from over 32,000 people since September.

Altogether, additional support for those who lose their jobs and new help for people to get on the housing ladder.

Mr Deputy Speaker, in November I announced a series of measures to help businesses now.

Over 100,000 businesses, which employ well over half a million people, have taken up the option to defer their tax bills. I will continue this help.

Some 800,000 smaller companies will benefit from the delay in the increase in corporation tax.

And last month, I announced that we would allow companies to spread out payments of this year's up-rating of business rates.

But today I want to do more to help firms with cash flow problems.

Many viable companies face temporary difficulties because of the shortage of credit.

So today I am extending the help which allows loss-making companies to reclaim taxes on profits made in the last three years.

This help, which will lead on average to repayments worth £4,000 each year, will now be available for two years until November 2010.

Well over 100,000 businesses will have their full current losses wiped out.

And today I can also announce additional targeted support for companies' cash-flow, with a top-up trade credit insurance scheme.

This will match private sector trade credit insurance provision if insurers reduce their cover to any business operating in the UK.

I also want to help the UK's automotive industry, which has been one of the British success stories of the last decade.

But the loss of consumer confidence and credit crunch has led to a sharp fall in vehicle sales around the world.

In order to help the car industry and retail trade, I can announce that a scrappage scheme will be implemented next month.

It will provide motorists with a £2,000 discount on new vehicles bought when they trade in cars over ten years old.

It will be a time-limited scheme until March 2010. My Right Honourable Friend the Secretary of State for Business will announce details shortly.

Mr Deputy Speaker, we have made our choice to help those who have lost their jobs find work quickly and, if needed, to learn skills.

We are acting decisively to prevent a new generation of young people becoming a lost generation.

We are offering real support to homeowners - and to business - through this unprecedented economic crisis.

We could have decided to do nothing. But we chose to act.

By doing so we have not just protected people but we will also reduce the length and severity of the recession, lessening the impact on our public finances in the medium term.

Mr Deputy Speaker, I now turn to the public finances and the action I will take to put them on a sustainable footing in the medium and long-term.

As I told the House in November, tax revenues were falling.

The financial sector, which provided 27 per cent of corporate tax revenues, was already badly hit.

But since then, with the recession spreading across almost every sector, the wider tax-take has also come down sharply.

Corporation tax and income tax revenues have fallen. The problems in the housing market have led to a dramatic reduction in stamp duty.

In the UK, tax as a share of GDP is 1.2 percentage points lower now than it was a year ago.

Here and across the world, tax revenues are down and will take some years to come back up.

At the same time, our reformed welfare state is rightly providing support to families, but it does come at an added cost to the exchequer.

Many countries have also intervened to strengthen their banking systems.

My public finances forecasts today include a provisional estimate for the potential cost of this - totalling 3-1/2 per cent of GDP.

Mr Deputy Speaker, around the world, fiscal deficits and government debt have been rising sharply to levels not seen since the Second World War.

This is a response to an unprecedented financial crisis and a deep and widespread global recession.

Allowing borrowing to rise - protecting services, helping people and businesses - is the right thing to do.

The alternative, to take money out of the economy now, as some have suggested, would damage key public services, create more unemployment, lengthen the downturn and lead, in the end, to higher, not lower debt.

This Government, and others, have learnt from the historic economic mistakes of the interwar period, that countries cannot deflate their way out of recession.

Mr Deputy Speaker, taken together, my Budget measures today represent a fiscal easing of about half a percent of GDP this year - followed by a tightening of 0.8 per cent of GDP per year until 2013-14.

I believe this is a sensible pathway to sustainable public finances.

It will mean, as I have said, that the budget deficit will be halved in the next four years.

At this stage, when there is so much uncertainty, to do so quicker would prevent us helping people now, choke off the recovery, and stop us investing for the future.

Many countries, as a result of their action to support the economy, have seen higher deficits.

In the US, for example, the Congressional Budget Office expects their deficit to be 13 per cent of GDP in 2009, 10 per cent in 2010, and even in 2019, the deficit will be above 5 per cent.

Our own figures for public sector net borrowing will be £175bn this year, or some 12.4 per cent of GDP.

From 2010, as the economy starts to recover, and the measures announced in November and today take effect, borrowing will fall to £173bn, then £140bn, £118bn and £97bn.

As a share of GDP, our borrowing will be 11.9 per cent of GDP next year, and then, as we move towards balance, 9.1 per cent in 2011-12, then 7.2 per cent and 5.5 per cent in 2013-14.

Mr Deputy Speaker, this downturn will inevitably mean sharp increases in national debt relative to GDP.

UK net debt, which includes the cost of stabilising the banking system, will, as a share of GDP, increase from 59 per cent this year, to 68 per cent next, 74 per cent in 2011-12, 78 per cent and 79 per cent in 2013-14.

It will stabilise and then begin to fall in 2015-16.

In countries across the world, because of this economic crisis, it will take longer for deficits to come back into balance.

Because of the steps we are taking, I expect the underlying current budget deficit to come back into balance two years later.

Mr Deputy Speaker, we need to help people now, to maintain key public services, invest for the future, while keeping the public finances on a sustainable footing.

Indeed, this is the best way to drive up economic growth, which, in turn, is the best way to bring down borrowing and rebalance the public finances.

We must do this within a time-scale that does not damage the recovery.

This will require tough decisions, but I am determined that they will be fair decisions.

Mr Deputy Speaker, it cannot be fair that those who should pay tax, are allowed to avoid it.

Over the last decade, we have taken a number of measures, which have reduced tax evasion and avoidance - on average reducing avoidance by over £1bn a year.

I intend to build on this today. We have identified loopholes and schemes, which, when closed, will result in £1bn of extra revenue over the next 3 years.

Mr Deputy Speaker, in this Budget there will be new measures, to help pensioners and savers on middle and modest incomes.

It is important that everyone is encouraged to save for their retirement - and we will continue to support them to do so.

But I intend to address the anomaly which sees a tiny proportion at the top taking a large slice of the help we give people to save.

It is difficult to justify how a quarter of all the money the country spends on pensions tax relief goes, as now, to the top 1-1/2 per cent of pension savers.

So from April 2011, I will restrict pension tax relief for those with incomes over £150,000 so it is gradually tapered to the same 20 per cent rate the majority of people receive.

We will consult on implementation. I am introducing measures from today to prevent forestalling.

Again only affecting those with incomes over £150,000.

Mr Deputy Speaker, I am not proposing to increase taxes on income for this year.

However, as the economy recovers and wages start to grow again, it is right that we take additional steps.

I believe that it is fair that those who have gained the most should contribute more.

Only those with incomes over £100,000 a year - or 2 per cent of the population - will be affected.

In November, I announced a new rate of income tax of 45 per cent on incomes above £150,000 - the top one per cent of taxpayers.

In order to help pay for additional support for people now, I have decided that the new rate will be 50 per cent, and will come in from next April - a year earlier.

In November, I also announced that I was reducing personal allowances for the very highest earners with incomes over £100,000.

These allowances are worth twice as much as those of basic-rate taxpayers.

I have now decided to fully withdraw the benefit of that allowance for those with incomes over £100,000 from next April.

Mr Deputy Speaker, these measures are necessary to build our recovery and secure our country's economic future.

Along with other measures, including for landfill, company cars and gaming, I can also announce the following.

I will continue to monitor oil prices, but I expect that fuel duty will increase by 2 pence per litre in September, and then by 1 penny a litre above indexation each April for the next four years.

Alcohol duties will go up by 2 per cent from midnight tonight.

There will be an increase in tobacco duty of 2 per cent from 6pm tonight.

Taken together, these measures will raise over £6bn by 2012 - to secure Britain's economic future and to provide help for people now when they need it most.

Mr Deputy Speaker, the importance of our public services, on which we all depend, becomes even clearer during difficult times.

We have made our choice to continue investing in our public services which underpin the health and strength of our nation now and in the future.

In the last ten years, this investment has seen an extra 40,000 doctors, 41,000 teachers and over 70,000 nurses.

But just as every family is looking closely at their own budget - to ensure they get best value for money - so should the Government.

Since 2004, the Government has identified and made £26.5 billion in efficiency savings, while continuing to invest to improve schools, hospitals and other public services.

In November, I announced plans to find an additional £5bn of efficiency savings in 2010-11, on top of a total of £30bn in this spending review period.

Mr Deputy Speaker, some have argued that we should cut public services immediately, rather than invest and grow our way out of the recession.

That would be the wrong thing to do.

I can confirm that we are able to secure these savings that year, while increasing investment, as planned, for local health services by over 5 per cent and for schools by over 4 per cent.

Yesterday, we published the reports of the five independent reviews I set up last year.

They have identified extra efficiencies from 2011 which rise to a further £9bn of additional savings a year by 2013-14.

They include efficiencies in public sector back-office functions and IT, improved procurement, and better collaboration and innovation at the local level.

This will allows us to protect front line public services, while keeping current spending growth, in real terms, at an average of 0.7 per cent a year from 2011-12 onwards.

Mr Deputy Speaker, capital spending is equally important to the future of our country.

Over the last five years, this investment has transformed services with 61 major hospital schemes, 140 new schools and improved transport links, including the modernisation of the West Coast main line.

It is essential to help create jobs, boost the recovery and deliver economic success in the long term.

I intend that capital investment will continue at historically high levels to 2012, as we prepare for the Olympic games in Britain.

After this, public sector net investment will be at 1-1/4 per cent of GDP by 2013-14, still twice as high as in 1997.

Indeed, the efficiency savings we are making will help us direct more money to continue to support investment that everyone in our country depends on.

The Government has set itself a central goal of realising up to £16 billion of property and other asset sales in the three years from 2011-12, with proceeds raised being used for new capital investment.

Mr Deputy Speaker, as a result of the measures I have announced today I can afford to make investments in the future of Britain.

These funds will be invested now, to help ensure we seize the opportunities that will come from a world economy expected to double in size.

I have announced today £3bn extra support to help people find work quickly, with a new guarantee for the young.

There will also be £1bn to help us combat climate change, by supporting low carbon industries and green collar jobs.

There is close to £1bn to help homeowners, meet future housing supply and allow the construction industry to recover quickly.

And there is £2.5bn for business, to encourage investment in the industries and high-paid high-skilled jobs of the future.

Sectors such as advanced manufacturing, the creative industries and low-carbon technologies.

All essential if we are to prepare for the future.

Mr Deputy Speaker, a successful economy needs a strong financial sector.

We don't want to throw away the many advantages that have come from our position as a world centre for finance.

I intend that we retain that position. Hundreds of thousands of jobs across the country depend on it.

We need to build trust in the banking system, and harness the strengths of the financial services sector for the benefit of society

Crucial to this is financial regulation.

I will shortly publish a Treasury paper with my recommendations for wide-ranging reform.

They will propose action to reform corporate governance and remuneration at banks to avoid undue risk taking.

To improve regulation of capital and liquidity so banks do not over-extend themselves.

To increase transparency, to achieve a single set of accounting rules - so that we can see the risks banks are taking.

And to regulate all important institutions including hedge funds.

It will also propose action to reduce the impact of the failure of financial firms; protect and support consumers; improve efficiency and competition in financial markets; as well as strengthening regulators' powers.

And all these steps will, in turn, complement the G20 agreement to restore trust in the global financial system.

Mr Deputy Speaker, strengthening the banking system is crucial to the recovery and to the economy.

But the strength of our economy, and health of our society, also depends on meeting long-term demand for housing.

I have two measures to help achieve this.

First, we want to work with the industry to tackle the restraints, which house-builders have told me, could prevent them from acting now to increase housing supply.

This will give construction firms more certainty and help them meet housing demand more effectively.

Second, lack of finance now is affecting house builders and preventing the long-term investment that we need.

So today I can announce £500m of extra financial support.

It will kick-start building on housing projects, stalled because of the credit crunch, delivering thousands of new homes.

As part of this support, we are providing £100m for local authorities to build new energy-efficient housing.

I have one further announcement to make about housing for a particular group.

The whole country is united in admiration for the courage and professionalism of our Armed Forces.

I want to ensure this admiration is reflected in the quality of their accommodation.

I am bringing forward £50m to accelerate the modernisation programme for this housing to ensure this happens.

Let me turn, next, to the targeted help for business, which will build on the strengths of our economy.

A sustained and strong recovery depends on companies, of all sizes, making the most of new global opportunities.

Mr Deputy Speaker, a competitive exchange rate will help exporters.

It is also vital for our recovery that Britain and other countries remain open to free trade.

So it is essential that the Export Credits Guarantee Department gives business the support they need.

I intend to report back later this year on how this support can be improved.

Next, I have a number of proposals to encourage investment.

There is, at the moment, less incentive to explore and extract oil from the North Sea.

So I am bringing forward incentives to encourage smaller fields to be brought into production, which could lead to an extra two billion barrels of oil and gas that would otherwise remain under the North Sea.

They will also remove fiscal barriers so the North Sea can become a hub for energy of the future - gas storage, carbon capture and off-shore wind. I want to say more about this later.

I want other industries to invest too.

Businesses already benefit significantly from an annual £50,000 investment allowance which was announced two years ago.

I want to go further to promote investment now.

So for this year, I will double the main capital allowance rate to 40 per cent.

This will encourage firms to bring forward investment, in particular those companies in the growth sectors that will deliver the rewarding jobs of the future.

It will mean enhanced tax relief to support investment of £50 billion this year.

Including £10bn of investment in the vitally important communications sector.

Mr Deputy Speaker, it is vital to ensure the entire country and economy benefits from the digital age.

So I am allocating extra funding for digital investment, to help to extend the broadband network to almost every community.

This will allow us to deliver the vision set out in the Digital Britain report - making sure everyone can benefit from this communications revolution and create thousands more skilled jobs.

Next, Mr Deputy Speaker, Government can and should do more to buttress the strength and capability we need for our economic future.

On Monday, the Government published a new industrial framework, whose aim is to remove the barriers holding back innovative and fast-growing companies - and to help markets work better.

To support this industrial activity and strategy, I can announce the creation of a new £750m Strategic Investment Fund to help the country seize the opportunities ahead.

This new fund will provide financial support, focusing on emerging technologies and regionally important sectors in, for example, advanced manufacturing, digital and biotechnology.

It will encourage exports, support inward investment, promote research and development and harness commercially our world-class science base.

And it will complement the two new City Region Pilots, in Manchester and Leeds, which will also have a major role in promoting economic investment.

Mr Deputy Speaker, green technology will be one of the great growth sectors in the world economy.

In preparing for the future, Britain's economic recovery must be sustainable and protect the environment.

These efforts also have the potential to create thousands of hi-tech businesses and hundreds of thousands of high-skilled jobs.

Climate change is one of the biggest challenges our world faces - and Britain is setting the lead.

We are ahead of every other major developed country in progress against our Kyoto targets.

And today, I am presenting the world's first ever carbon budget, which commits Britain to cut carbon emission by 34 per cent by 2020.

These budgets give industry the certainty needed to developed and use low carbon technology - cutting emissions, creating new businesses and jobs.

They are a landmark step, which point the way to the vital decisions which must be made at the Copenhagen Climate Change Summit later this year.

Mr Deputy Speaker, saving energy is the easiest and cheapest way to cut carbon emissions - and also saves people and business money.

Over the last 12 months, we have helped around one million homes improve central heating or insulation.

Today I can announce £435m of extra support to deliver energy efficiency measures - for homes, businesses and public buildings.

Mr Deputy Speaker, as well as saving energy, we need cleaner energy.

We must build on Britain's status as the world leader in offshore wind power generation.

The credit squeeze is holding back major offshore wind projects.

I want to lift the barriers - through £525m of new financial support over the next two years for off-shore wind, funded through the renewables obligation.

The potential is enormous. I am confident that this will lead to major projects getting the go-ahead quickly, providing enough electricity to meet the needs of up to 3m households.

We need to support all forms of renewable energy.

I can also announce that renewable and other energy projects in the UK stand to benefit from up to £4bn of new capital from the European Investment Bank.

Mr Deputy Speaker, coal, oil and gas will continue to be a major source of energy for the foreseeable future.

Clean technologies, such as Carbon Capture and Storage, are vital to ensure we can produce power from these sources without damaging the environment

I am determined that this country's research and technological expertise is used to make us world-leaders in this area too.

So I can announce that a new funding mechanism will be used to finance at least two, and up to four, demonstration projects.

Mr Deputy Speaker, the new generation of power plants could be even more efficient by using the heat produced in the generation of power.

To encourage the use of Combined Heat and Power technology, I will exempt those projects from the Climate Change Levy from 2013 - bringing forward over £2.5 billion in investment.

I can also announce that, through £405m of new funding, we will also encourage low carbon energy and advanced green manufacturing in Britain - to drive the application of new technology and invest in small scale projects.

In particular, this will help us strengthen the supply chain right across these sectors, and build on the expertise we already have in this country.

Mr Deputy Speaker, on the back of the discovery of oil and gas in the North Sea, we became a world leader in every aspect of oil technology and the industry.

I am determined that we will replicate this success across the renewable energy and low carbon sectors.

The steps we are taking today will help make sure we meet this ambition.

This will help protect our planet and secure the country's economic future.

The measures I have announced underline our vision for Britain.

They offer support for people when they need it, but also hope for the future.

They put in place the vital building blocks for recovery and economic long-term success.

And everything we have done - whether supporting families now, maintaining investment in our public services and putting the nation's finances on a sustainable path - is based on our values of fairness and opportunity.

Even in this time of global economic difficulty, we are determined to continue building a fairer society.

Mr Deputy Speaker, in November I provided help for families and pensioners. Today I want to do more.

22 million people on middle incomes have seen their income tax go down this month.

There is help for millions of families too - with child tax credit up by £75 from this month - and the increase in child benefit paid early.

Today I can announce additional targeted measures.

The Government is determined to eradicate child poverty. So, first, I can announce that, from April next year, the child element of the Child Tax Credit will increase by £20.

Second, children with disabilities need extra help to make the most of their potential.

So we will add an extra £100 a year to their Child Trust Fund.

For those with severe disabilities, it will be an extra £200 each year.

Third, I can announce an increase in statutory redundancy pay from £350 to £380 a week.

Mr Deputy Speaker, increasingly grandparents play a big role in family life and in looking after their grandchildren.

To reflect this, we will, for the first time, ensure these caring responsibilities for grandparents of working age will count towards their entitlement for the basic state pension.

I also want to announce further help for pensioners and savers.

Earlier this month, pensioners on modest incomes got the biggest ever increase in pension credit while the basic state pension increased by £4.55 a week.

I want to re-affirm today our commitment to increase the basic state pension by at least 2.5 per cent.

So if RPI inflation this September is below zero, as we expect, pensioners can be confident that their pensions will rise in real terms.

Last year, because of the steep increase in energy prices, I brought in a one-off increase in the Winter Fuel Allowance.

Energy prices are now expected to come down.

But to help pensioners even more, I intend to maintain this allowance at the higher level for another year - worth £250 for over 60s and £400 for over 80s.

Mr Deputy Speaker, the fall in interest rates has been a welcome benefit to the economy and millions of homeowners whose mortgage costs have come down.

But this has also reduced the amount of interest paid out on savings - and has particularly hit pensioners who rely on this extra money.

There are over 5-1/2 million pensioner households who have modest savings, of less than £10,000. I want to help them.

For over a decade, the capital disregard on Pension Credit has been at £6,000 or below.

It means savings above this level reduce the amount of help households get through Pension Credit.

I believe it is now time to increase these limits, which will help compensate modest-income pensioners, with limited savings.

So from November 2009, the limit will be raised to £10,000.

This will benefit over half a million pensioners on modest incomes, who will gain by an average of £4 per week.

Mr Deputy Speaker, I have one other announcement to make on savings.

Tax-free ISAs have been a great success. 18m people have taken them out, saving in them almost £290bn.

Since they were introduced 10 years ago, the annual limit has only been increased once, and now stands at £7,200.

I want to go further. To help savers on the tenth anniversary of ISAs, I intend to increase the total annual limits to £10,200, of which £5,100 can be saved in cash.

This new limit will be introduced this year for those aged 50 or over, and will come in next year for everyone else.

Fair and targeted help for grandparents and pensioners - and to tackle child poverty.

Encouraging people to save - now and in the future.

Mr Deputy Speaker, every country has been hit by this global recession.

But we have confidence in Britain's future and in our country's strength.

You can grow your way out of recession. You cannot cut your way out.

We have made our choice.

To help people now.

To build Britain's future.

And I commend this Budget to the House.

ENDS

(HMT) Protecting Tax Revenues


Today the Chancellor announces a series of measures to protect the tax system from abuse and ensure that all individuals and businesses pay their fair share of tax.

The Government is determined to continue to challenge tax evasion and avoidance, which undermine fiscal stability, damage the delivery of policy objectives, impose significant costs on society and shift a greater burden of tax onto ordinary taxpayers.

This Budget includes measures to tackle evasion, including the publication of the names of deliberate tax defaulters and an offshore disclosure opportunity, and targeted anti-avoidance measures as a proportionate response to those who seek to avoid paying their fair share.

The Government has also been leading international efforts to tackle tax havens and tax evasion through its Presidency of the G20. This will deliver improved transparency and exchange of tax information between jurisdictions and important new commitments from a wide range of countries.

Budget includes a package of measures which raise over £1 billion during the period 2009-10 to 2011-12, and protect a further £3 billion per year of tax receipts by 2010-11 from erosion by tax evasion and avoidance.

DETAILS

Offshore disclosure

Please see Press Notice 1 for further details of a New Disclosure Opportunity (NDO) for offshore bank account holders.

Publication of names of serious tax defaulters

Please see Press Notice 1 for further details of the publication by HMRC of the names of deliberate tax defaulters.

New reporting requirements for tax defaulters

A small minority of tax defaulters put significant tax revenues at risk. The Government today announces that those who have incurred a penalty for the deliberate understatement of tax of at least £5,000 will be required to provide more information on their tax affairs for up to five years to ensure they have proper systems to be able to make a correct tax return and allow HMRC to monitor future compliance.

Accountability of senior accounting officers

The Government today announces a measure to establish a statutory requirement for senior accounting officers of major corporates to certify personally that adequate controls to prepare accurate tax computations are in place.

Developing the disclosure of avoidance schemes regime

Disclosure of Tax Avoidance Schemes (DOTAS) is an important part of the tax framework giving HMRC early warning of avoidance schemes. HMRC will begin discussions with interested parties with a view to extending the 'hallmarks' used to identify avoidance schemes, to ensure they continue to bear down on avoidance, and revising the penalty regime to introduce tougher sanctions for the non compliant.

Tacking avoidance of tax on disguised interest and transfers of income streams

Following consultation the Government today announces the introduction of principles-based legislation to counter avoidance in two areas involving financial products, in response to continued attempts at abuse. Specifically, the legislation will prevent schemes designed to avoid tax on interest received and schemes seeking to side-step existing anti-avoidance legislation on the sale of income streams.

Proposals to counter avoidance using financial products

The Government today announces a measure to counter avoidance schemes involving the use of convertible securities within a group to create accounting asymmetries and the creation of artificial losses on loans and derivatives.

Foreign exchange targeted anti-avoidance rule

The Government today announces a targeted anti-avoidance rule to stop the use of tax avoidance schemes that seek to exploit the foreign exchange tax matching rules. Exchange gains or losses on borrowings or currency derivatives will only be disregarded for tax purposes if they do not arise from tax avoidance arrangements.

Exploitation of the double tax relief and manufactured overseas dividend rules

The Government today announces measures to clarify the rules that provide relief for UK tax against foreign tax payable on foreign income (double taxation relief); and the rules dealing with manufactured overseas dividends. These changes, effective from today

* prevent a deduction for foreign tax on the receipt of a Manufactured Overseas Dividend by a company, where the economic cost of the foreign tax has not been borne by the company;

* ensure that banks always take a reasonable proportion of their funding costs into account in the calculation of double taxation relief.

The changes will also put beyond doubt:

* that any receipts that are in substance trade income will be taxed accordingly. Banks and other financial institutions will be unable to gain a tax advantage by fragmenting parts of their trade into investment companies; and

* that double taxation relief will be given net of any repayments of foreign tax, whether made to the original payer or otherwise.

Countering abuse in the corporate intangible fixed asset regime

The Government today announces a measure to clarify the intangible fixed assets regime rules by confirming that goodwill is treated as intended. Effective from today, the legislation will confirm that for the purposes of the corporate intangible regime, goodwill includes internally-generated goodwill. It also confirms that all goodwill is created in the course of carrying on the business in question and is subject to rules determining whether goodwill is treated as created on or after 1 April 2002.

Ensuring tax and National Insurance paid on lease premiums

The Government today announces a measure to prevent tax avoidance where an employee or director of a company is provided with living accommodation through the payment of a lease premium rather than a full market rent for the use of the property. From today, those who take out new leases using a lease premium will pay tax and National insurance contributions as if the full market rent had been paid.

North Sea Fiscal Regime: Preventing Accelerated Decommissioning Relief

The Government announces a measure that changes the North Sea fiscal regime to ensure companies cannot access tax relief for decommissioning oil and gas infrastructure years in advance of the decommissioning activity actually being carried out. As originally intended, tax relief for this expenditure will only be incurred when decommissioning work is actually carried out.

Spotlight on selected avoidance schemes

The Government announces today that HMRC will shortly publish a Spotlight giving notice of selected avoidance schemes that are thought to be ineffective to discourage potential users. HMRC will challenge these schemes when encountered.

Structured foreign exchange arrangements

The Government announces today the publication of a technical note in the summer. The note will set out the issues and potential approaches to certain structured financial arrangements (often described as overhedging or underhedging) that, although not undertaken for tax avoidance, seek to pass on to the Exchequer, through tax relief, commercial risk that would otherwise be borne by groups on such transactions. The Government believes that the economic risks should be shared between the Exchequer and business as Parliament intended.

Alcohol Fraud Strategy

The Government today announces the renewal of its strategy for protecting honest businesses and addressing tax losses through alcohol fraud. 'Tackling Alcohol Fraud' is a programme of change for implementation in stages through 2009/10, including:

* strengthening the operational response to alcohol fraud, establishing new alcohol anti-fraud teams as part of a centrally coordinated effort to detect, disrupt and dismantle organised criminal networks and illicit supply chains;

* legislating where necessary to make life tougher for criminals and easier for honest businesses to compete; and,

* working closely with legitimate businesses in the continuing fight against alcohol fraud.

(HMT) Building Britain's future


The Government's economic objective is to build a strong economy and a fair society, where there is opportunity and security for all. Budget 2009, Building's Britain's Future, presents updated assessments and forecasts of the economy and public finances and reports on how in the face of a steep and synchronised global downturn, the Government is delivering a comprehensive and coherent package of targeted support to continue to help households and businesses, while implementing a strategy to support a strong and sustainable recovery.

Building on the strategy set out at the 2008 Pre-Budget Report, the Budget announces targeted discretionary support for the economy through these difficult times, while continuing sustained fiscal consolidation from 2010-11 when the economy is expected to be recovering and able to support a reduction in borrowing:

* support for employment, including for Jobcentre Plus and the Flexible New Deal, and the offer of a guaranteed job, training or work placement for all 18-24 year olds who reach 12 months unemployed;

* support for business, including by extending the enhanced loss relief for an additional year and expanding HMRC's Business Payment Support Service, increasing capital allowances for new investment to 40 per cent for one year, and establishing a £750 million Strategic Investment Fund to support advanced industrial projects of strategic importance;

* support for individuals, including through an increase in the annual investment limit for Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs) to £10,200, up to £5,100 of which can be saved in cash; an additional payment alongside the Winter Fuel Payment worth £100 for households with someone aged over 80 and £50 for households with someone aged over 60;

* support for homeowners and homebuyers, including a £600 million funding package of measures to build more homes through unlocking sites currently sitting as dormant, and an extension of the stamp duty holiday for all houses costing up to £175,000 until the end of the year.

* support for the environment, including setting the world's first carbon budgets and measures to encourage energy efficiency and low-carbon growth.

The Budget also announces:

* from April 2010, an additional rate of income tax of 50 per cent will apply to income over £150,000, and the income tax personal allowance will be restricted for those with income over £100,000;

* from April 2011, tax relief on pensions contributions will be restricted for those with incomes of £150,000 and over, and tapered down until it is 20 per cent;

* fuel duty will increase by 2 pence per litre on 1 September 2009, and by 1 penny per litre in real terms each year from 2010 to 2013;

* £5 billion recoverable value for money savings in 2010-11 raising the 2007 Comprehensive Spending Review target from £30 billion to £35 billion, and in the next Spending Review period, additional efficiencies to help support the economy and front-line services, rising to £9 billion by 2013-14. The Budget sets assumptions for spending growth from 2011-12 onwards, with current spending growing by an average 0.7 per cent in real terms and public sector net investment moving to 11/4 per cent of GDP by 2013-14.

MAINTAINING MACROECONOMIC STABILITY

The financial crisis has caused a steep and synchronised global downturn. Recessions are being experienced in all the world's major advanced economies and the world economy is set to contract by 11/4 per cent in 2009, the first fall in the post-war period. The UK Government, as Chair of the G20 in 2009, forged agreement between G20 Leaders on a comprehensive Global plan for recovery and reform at the London Summit in April 2009.

The Government is delivering a coherent and comprehensive package of support to restore the flow of credit, support economic recovery in the UK and build a strong economy for the future, while ensuring sound public finances.

The Government is delivering fiscal support worth 4 per cent of GDP in 2009-10 from the measure announced in this Budget, the 2008 Pre-Budget Report and the operation of the automatic stabilisers. The Bank of England has cut Bank Rate to 1/2 a per cent and announced a £75 billion programme of asset purchases. With substantial macroeconomic stimulus already in the system, this Budget focuses on further targeted support for those most affected by the downturn, and on ensuring a sustained and sustainable recovery, including support for employment and investment.

It will take time for this support to take hold fully. Like most advanced economies, the UK will experience a sharp recession in 2009, with GDP falling by -3 1/2 per cent in 2009, before substantial macroeconomic stimulus drives recovery, with growth of 1 1/4 per cent forecast in 2010.

Global economic developments will have a profound effect on the fiscal positions of most countries, with debt likely to rise significantly in all advanced economies. In the UK, borrowing is forecast to peak at 12.4 per cent of GDP in 2009-10, before falling as the economy recovers and the Government takes further action to ensure sustainability. Building on the significant fiscal consolidation announced in the 2008 Pre-Budget Report, this Budget sets out tax and spending measures that reduce borrowing by £26 1/2 billion by 2013-14:

* from April 2010, an additional rate of income tax of 50 per cent will apply to income over £150,000 and the income tax personal allowance will be restricted for those with incomes over £100,000. From April 2011, tax relief on pensions contribution will be restricted for those with incomes of £150,000 and over, and tapered down until it is 20 per cent. Fuel duty will increase by 2 pence per litre on 1 September 2009, and by 1 penny per litre in real terms each year from 2010 to 2013; and

* the Government will continue to improve and invest in public services while delivering the additional savings identified by the Operational Efficiency Programme over the next Spending Review period, rising to £9 billion a year by 2013-14. Current spending will grow by an average of 0.7 per cent a year in real terms between 2011-12 and 2013-14 and public sector net investment will move to 1 1/4 per cent of GDP by 2013-14.

Reflecting the principle of transparency, the fiscal forecasts include a provisional estimate for the high end of a range for the net impact of unrealised losses on financial sector interventions, equal to 3 1/2 per cent of GDP.

Budget measures contribute to an average reduction in the cyclically-adjusted current budget of over 0.8 per cent a year from 2010-11 to 2013-14. Based on cautious fiscal forecasting assumptions, borrowing declines to 5.5 per cent in 2013-14, and as a result net debt stabilises at 79 per cent of GDP, including potential losses on financial sector interventions, compared with 36 per cent at the end of 2006-07, when the economy was last on trend.

The Budget 2009 fiscal projections are consistent with the temporary fiscal operating rule introduced in the 2008 Pre-Budget Report, entailing a return to cyclically-adjusted current balance and debt falling as a share of the economy by 2017-18, when the global shocks will have worked their way through the economy in full.

FINANCIAL STABILITY

The world economy was hit by a global credit shock in mid-2007. Since then, global financial markets have suffered a sustained period of stress and instability. The intensification of the financial market stress into the worst global financial crisis for generations delivered a severe blow to an already weakened world economy, precipitating a steep and synchronised global downturn. The world economy is forecast to contract in 2009 for the first time in the post-war period.

Financial markets are critical to the well-being of all citizens and the success of all businesses in this country. They also strongly influence economic growth and development across the world. They are the core mechanism for allocating resources efficiently in an economy and a key driver of productivity, growth and opportunities. Financial instability, to the extent that it disrupts the functioning of financial markets, can therefore affect everybody.

Governments around the world have provided significant support to strengthen their financial systems. At the London Summit, G20 Leaders committed to take all necessary action to restore the flow of credit and ensure the soundness of systemically important institutions.

The Government has taken decisive action to support the stability of the financial system and wider economy. Tackling a downturn of this nature and dealing with its consequences requires a comprehensive policy response to support the economy: fiscal and monetary policy, financial sector interventions, and targeted support for individuals and businesses.

The action taken by the Government since October 2008 has been successful in preventing the collapse of the financial system and ensuring that no retail depositors in UK banks or building societies lost money. These interventions have supported the wider economy, and they are helping individuals and businesses. The Government will continue to do whatever it takes to maintain financial stability through its objectives to ensure stability and restore confidence in the financial system, protect retail depositors' money and safeguard the interests of taxpayers.

This chapter sets out the Government's response to financial market disruption in two areas. First, it describes the Government's immediate response aimed at ensuring the stability of the financial system, involving:

* targeted action for individual financial institutions; and

* a comprehensive system-wide response, including action to ensure liquidity, strengthen bank capital, guarantee certain wholesale funding, deal with impaired assets, and increase lending in the economy.

Second, it sets out the Government's view of the longer-term action required to renew financial markets for the future. This chapter introduces a forthcoming paper by the Government, covering:

* key elements of the Government's approach to the future of financial markets;

* steps already taken to achieve this approach, including the Turner Review, leading work in the G20, and the Banking Act 2009; and

* further important action, including renewing financial regulation, reducing the impact of bank failure, protecting and supporting consumers, improving efficiency and competition in capital markets, and strengthening regulators and the international regulatory framework.

Further details on these and other measures are set out below:

Asset Management

The Government has been working closely with the asset management industry on a wide-ranging package of tax measures to enhance the competitiveness of the UK as a place for Authorised Investment Funds to locate. Following the launch of a new tax regime for property funds, helpful guidance on the distinction between investment and trading transactions and new tax rules for the Qualified Investor Scheme, the Government today announces:

* the launch of the Tax Elected Fund regime which will allow UK Authorised Investment Funds to be marketed competitively to UK investors and worldwide; and

* legislative change to clarify whether certain transactions will be taxed as trading or investment for UK AIFs and equivalent offshore funds.

This package helps to consolidate the UK's position as a key international centre for asset management.


SUPPORTING BUSINESS

As set out in Chapter 2, the financial crisis has caused a steep and synchronised global downturn. This chapter outlines how Government support, alongside action to restore the flow of credit in the financial system, is helping businesses across the UK. Budget 2009 builds on this support with targeted measures that will help businesses' short-term cashflow, including:

* further support to loss-making businesses, by extending the enhanced loss relief announced in the 2008 Pre-Budget Report for an additional year and expanding HMRC's Business Payment Support Service;

* enabling businesses to spread payment of this year's inflation up-rating to business rates over three years, as announced on 31 March 2009;

* a 'top-up' trade credit insurance scheme to help businesses maintain their finances, in which Government will offer to match private sector trade credit insurance provision, for a temporary period, if insurers reduce cover to any UK business; and

* for a temporary period, a vehicle scrappage scheme, co-funded with industry, that will enable consumers who scrap vehicles older than ten years to replace them with new vehicles at a discount of £2,000.

Over the last decade, the UK has built up key strengths that provide a platform for growth as the UK emerges from the recession. Consistent with the strategic vision set out in Building Britain's Future: New Industry, New Jobs published 20 April 2009, Budget 2009 announces a package of measures that will support the adjustment towards renewed economic growth and improve the UK's competitiveness, offering:

* an increase in capital allowances for new investment to 40 per cent for one year, with effect from April 2009, to allow a higher proportion of private investment to be offset in that year against taxable profits;

* a £750 million Strategic Investment Fund to support advanced industrial projects of strategic importance, of which a third of the funding will be earmarked specifically for low carbon projects; and

* the implementation of a package of reforms to the taxation of foreign profits, including the introduction of an exemption for foreign dividends, supported by a limited restriction to the interest deduction rules.

Further details on these and other measures are set out below:

Enhanced First Year Capital Allowances

The Government today announces the introduction of an enhanced first-year capital allowance of 40 per cent for one year, introduced with effect from April 2009. This will double the rate of relief available to businesses and support around £50 billion of investment. This is in addition to the significant benefit the vast majority of businesses already receive from the £50,000 Annual Investment Allowance.

Extra support to loss-making businesses

The 2008 Pre-Budget Report announced a temporary, one-year extension of loss carry-back for businesses from one to three years, for losses up to £50,000. The Government today announces further enhancements to this support, to help more businesses through the downturn, by:

* extending this enhanced relief for two years rather than one (from 24 November 2008 for companies, and for the 2008-09 and 2009-10 tax years for unincorporated businesses). Together with the change made at the 2008 Pre-Budget Report, this will benefit an expected 140,000 businesses ; and

* allowing struggling businesses expecting to make losses to offset these against tax bills due on profits from the previous year, using HMRC's Business Payment Support Service.

Business rates

As announced on 31 March 2009, the Government will enable businesses to spread the payment of the April 2009 uprating to business rates over three years. The Government will also allow those affected by the end of the 2005 transitional relief scheme to spread payment of the increase in their bills over three years.

Strategic Investment Fund

The Government today announces it will establish a £750 million Strategic Investment Fund to support advanced industrial projects of strategic importance. This includes £50 million for the Technology Strategy Board and £10 million for UK Trade and Investment. £250 million of this fund will be earmarked for low carbon investments.

Vehicle scrappage scheme

The Government announces the introduction of a temporary vehicle scrappage scheme. A discount of £2,000 will be offered to consumers buying a new vehicle to replace a vehicle more than ten years old which they have owned for more than twelve months. The Government will set aside £300 million for this scheme with funding matched by manufacturers participating in the scheme.

Trade credit insurance

The Government today announces a 'top-up' trade credit insurance scheme to help UK businesses maintain their finances in the current economic climate. Under this scheme, the Government will offer to top up private sector trade credit insurance provision if insurers reduce cover from any business operating in the UK. Cover provided under this scheme will be time-limited and capped at £5 billion, providing a real breathing-space for businesses to adjust to changing circumstances. Further detail on the trade credit insurance top-up scheme can be found at: http://www.businesslink.gov.uk/creditinsurance.

Foreign profits

The Government confirms the introduction of a package of reforms to the taxation of foreign profits, including a tax exemption for most foreign dividends received by UK groups. This will be supported by a restriction on interest deductibility (worldwide debt cap) and the replacement of the Treasury Consents rules with a new post-transaction reporting requirement. As a necessary consequence of the dividend exemption, there will also be changes to the Controlled Foreign Companies (CFC) rules. These measures will support and enhance the competitiveness and attractiveness of the UK as a location for multinational business.

North Sea fiscal regime

Following the consultation launched at the 2008 Pre-Budget Report, Budget 2009 announces a package of measures to encourage the economic recovery of the UK's oil and gas reserves. This package will include the introduction of incentives to encourage investment in small and technically challenging fields, which could assist in unlocking around 2 billion barrels of the UK's remaining oil and gas reserves. The package also includes measures to assist asset trades and give companies the certainty and stability they need to underpin investment.

Budget 2009 also announces reforms to remove barriers to projects that reuse North Sea infrastructure for other activities, including gas storage, carbon capture and storage and wind energy.

Export Credits Guarantee Department Letter of Credit scheme

The Government today announces that the Export Credits Guarantee Department (ECGD) will shortly consult on a new facility to provide Government support for short-term trade finance through sharing risks with banks in confirming letters of credit. This facility will give exporters greater certainty of payment when selling goods in difficult markets.

Digital Britain

The Budget today announces that the Government will pursue Universal Service in broadband at 2 Megabits per second alongside further support to promote broadband take-up and basic digital skills.

The Budget also announces a review of the powers and duties of Ofcom to ensure it can strike the right balance between delivering competition and promoting investment and confirms approval for 'Digital Region', a £100 million project led by Yorkshire Forward that will roll-out next-generation broadband to South Yorkshire.

Exploring the tax treatment of Intellectual Property to enhance the competitiveness of the UK

As part of the Government's commitment to examine the challenges facing the UK tax system and ensure its competitiveness, and focus on supporting the high value-added priority sectors in which the UK can excel in the future, the Government will consider the evidence for changes to the way the tax system encourages innovative activity and the relative attractiveness of the UK to global firms as they make decisions on where to locate their R&D and other innovation activities. Working with representatives across the business community, the Government will examine the balance of taxation of innovative activity, including IP. The Government will assess the evidence on the potential impacts of any reforms on economic activity, consult further with industry and set out its assessment and proposed approach before the Pre-Budget Report.

Water competition

In response to the final report for the Independent Cave Review of Competition and Innovation in the Water Markets published today, the Government announces a consultation on a package of reforms to further competition and innovation for large non-domestic customers, with a commitment to consider opening the market to all businesses at a later stage. The Government will also take forward further work on recommendations concerning establishing a value for water, and the industry's innovative capacity. Up to 26,600 businesses will benefit from the reforms by enabling them to switch supplier, which will result in downward pressure on prices, increased service levels and the better use of water.


Pilot City-Regions Announced

Budget announces new pilot city-region arrangements for Greater Manchester and Leeds, building on the Government's recent economic reforms through the Sub-National Review. The pilot city-regions will benefit from the stronger integration of planning, housing, transport, regeneration, employment and skills programmes, increasing their ability to drive sustainable growth and economic development.

The pilots will be overseen at Ministerial level and will draw on recent work from the Manchester Independent Economic Review and on innovation in the Leeds city-region in order to agree joint priorities with the Government that will support economic growth. Further work is also underway with partners in the West Midlands on their proposals for an accelerated development zone and employment and skills.

Insolvency package

The Budget announces that the Insolvency Service will launch a consultation in June 2009 on measures to help companies in financial difficulties. In addition, to prevent creditors from being unfairly treated through the abuse of pre-pack sales, Budget 2009 announces that this summer the Insolvency Service will publish the first of a series of regular reports on the monitoring of pre-pack sales.

Tax simplification

Following discussions with business, Budget 2009 sets out the next stage in the Government's rolling programme of tax simplification, including further progress on its tax simplification reviews. Budget 2009 announces that since 2006 the Government has implemented or committed to new measures that will deliver administrative savings to business of around £540 million per annum.

HELPING PEOPLE FAIRLY

Low inflation and interest rates mean many households will have higher real incomes in 2009. In addition, households have benefited from action that the Government has taken to support economic recovery, including an increase in the personal allowance and a temporary cut in VAT. However, the Government recognises that many households have been hit by the downturn, including those affected by rising unemployment or by falling hours or wages.

Budget 2009 announces further Government action to support employment, to help savers and families with children, to support pensioners and to help people manage their finances, including:

* an additional £1.7 billion set aside for the Department for Work and Pensions to sustain the high numbers of individuals currently moving off Jobseeker's Allowance in the early months of each claim and provide support for the minority who remain unemployed for longer periods;

* a guaranteed job, training or work placement for all 18-24 year olds who reach 12 months unemployed to ensure no young people are left behind due to long-term unemployment;

* an additional payment alongside this year's Winter Fuel Payment, worth £100 for households with someone aged over 80 and £50 for households with someone aged over 60;

* an increase in the annual investment limit for Individual Saving Accounts to £10,200, up to £5,100 of which can be saved in cash. These higher limits will be available to people aged 50 and over from 6 October 2009 and available to all from 6 April 2010, directly benefiting over five million people who currently use their full ISA allowance;

* an increase to the child element of the Child Tax Credit of an additional £20 a year above indexation from April 2010, providing valuable support to families with children;

* an additional £125 million in 2009-10 and £145 million in 2010-11 allocated to the Social Fund; and

* an increase in the level of statutory redundancy pay, making the weekly rate £380.

Budget 2009 also announces a package of measures to help homeowners, homebuyers and the housing market:

* a £600 million funding package of measures to build more homes through unlocking sites currently sitting dormant; and

* an extension of the stamp duty holiday for all houses costing up to £175,000 until 31 December 2009.

In addition, Budget 2009 announces:

* that from April 2010, an additional rate of income tax of 50 per cent will apply to income over £150,000, and the income tax personal allowance will be restricted for those with incomes over £100,000;

* that from April 2011, tax relief on pensions contributions will be restricted for those with incomes of £150,000 and over, and tapered down until it is 20 per cent; and

* changes to alcohol and tobacco duties, and a package of measures which will protect £3 billion of tax receipts a year by 2010-11 from tax evasion and avoidance.

Further details on these and other measures are set out below:

Child poverty

Budget 2009 reiterates the Government's commitment to the sustainable eradication of child poverty and the Government's intention to enshrine this pledge in legislation will drive continual progress towards these goals. Budget 2009 reinforces the Government's commitment to support all households through the economic downturn and announces further targeted support for vulnerable households including:

* increasing the child element of the Child Tax Credit by an additional £20 a year above indexation from April 2010, providing valuable support to families with children;

* amending the law to make clear that the current 4-week run-on in the Working Tax Credit extends to the childcare element, including for couples when only one partner falls out of work, helping to minimise disruption to children during these difficult changes;

* taking further steps to help low-income households gain access to the support they are entitled to, such as the extra tax credits available to people suffering a fall in income (already helping 355,000 people by an average of £35 per week); and

* outlining further detail on the child poverty Bill.

Jobcentre Plus funding

Budget 2009 announces that an additional £1.7 billion will be set aside for the Department for Work and Pensions over the next two years to ensure Jobcentre Plus and Flexible New Deal capacity is in place to respond effectively to rising unemployment. The effectiveness of this support helps ensure that most people who become unemployed find work again very quickly - 25% within a month and over half within 3 months

Support for individuals who have been unemployed for 12 months

The Government is introducing additional support for the long term unemployed, building on the extra support now available to those unemployed for over 6 months. The package will offer guaranteed support to 18-24 year olds who have been unemployed for 12 months, to prevent them becoming detached from the labour market. As part of this, the Government will allocate funding for Local Authorities and voluntary sector partners to provide 100,000 new jobs in socially useful activity and a further 50,000 jobs in areas of dense unemployment across the country. It is expected that 10% of these will be green jobs. The guarantee will also offer new training courses, and Community Work placements.

Budget 2009 also announces CareFirst, offering 50,000 traineeships for young people in the care sector. In the first half of last year, there were over 100,000 job vacancies in social care. The scheme will support providers to recruit young people to this growing sector, whilst providing opportunities for those in need of work. Providers will receive a subsidy for offering sustained employment and training to young people who have been out of work for 12 months, giving them the skills and experience they need for a permanent career in the sector.

Local Housing Allowance

The Government is reforming the Local Housing Allowance (LHA) so that it is more equitable and promotes work incentives. From April 2010, households will no longer be able to keep any of the surplus if the LHA they receive is higher than their rent. For those already receiving LHA, this reduction will not apply until the anniversary of their claim. It is essential that the LHA represents good value for money for the taxpayer and as this measure will only affect surpluses, it will not produce rent shortfalls.

Social Fund

The Social Fund provides interest free 'Budgeting' and 'Crisis' loans for vulnerable people, allowing them to meet and spread the payment of unexpected costs. The Government announces an additional £125 million in 2009-10 and £145 million in 2010-11 to ensure that the Social Fund across the UK is able to respond to increased demand. Details of the loan scheme and eligibility can be found at http://www.jobcentreplus.gov.uk.


Personal Tax

The Budget announces changes to the income tax system designed to deliver further consolidation to ensure the stability of the public finances. These changes are focused on individuals with the highest incomes who are most able to contribute. From April 2010:

* the additional rate of income tax will be 50% on income over £150,000, with a rate of 42.5% for dividends; and

* the value of the personal allowance will be restricted for those with incomes over £100,000, tapering down to zero.

These changes replace the 45% income tax rate and the two-stage taper of the personal allowance announced in the 2008 Pre-Budget Report.

Pension tax relief

The Government announces that from April 2011 tax relief on pensions contributions will be restricted for those with incomes over £150,000. From that level of income the value of pensions tax relief will be tapered down until it is 20 per cent for those on incomes over £180,000, making it worth the same for each pound of contribution to pension entitlement as for a basic rate income tax payer. The Government will consult on the implementation of this measure.

In anticipation of this change, the Government is also introducing legislation to prevent individuals taking advantage of the pensions tax relief while it is still available to them at a higher rate, by making substantial additional pension contributions prior to the restriction taking effect. Those who have never earned in excess of £150,000 are unaffected, as are those who continue with their regular pattern of contributions.

Support for savers

The Government today announces that the annual ISA investment limit will rise to £10,200, of which £5,100 can be saved in cash. These higher limits will be introduced for those aged 50 for tax year 2009-10, with the first deposits being available from 6 October 2009. This will enable those who have retired or are beginning to prepare for retirement to move taxed savings into a tax-advantaged ISA, rewarding those who have saved by improving their returns. The higher limits will then apply to everyone from 6 April 2010. This will give over 18 million ISA holders the opportunity to increase their tax-advantaged savings and directly benefit over 5 million individuals who make full use of either their cash or their overall ISA allowance.

Pensioner savers

The Government is introducing measures to target support on lower income pensioners who may have seen a fall in their income from savings. From Autumn 2009:

* the first £10,000 of savings held by pensioners will not be taken into account for assessment of their entitlement to Pension Credit, Housing Benefit and Council Tax Benefit. This will increase the income of around 540,000 Pension Credit claimants who have savings above the current disregard level of £6000. They will benefit by around £4 per week; and

* Pension Credit recipients who may have overpaid tax on their savings income in the past 6 years will be contacted as part of a taxback campaign. This campaign will encourage people to claim tax back on savings income and, where possible, register to avoid overpaying tax in future. Those who claim are expected to receive around £200 on average.

Support for pensioners

Building on the Government's commitment to help pensioners, Budget 2009 announces an additional payment of £100 to households with someone aged 80 or over and £50 to households with someone aged 60 or over, to be paid alongside the Winter Fuel Payment in 2009-10.

Child Trust Fund: disabled children

The Government will contribute £100 every year to the Child Trust Fund accounts of all disabled children, with severely disabled children receiving £200 per year. This further Government payment recognises that disabled children are likely to have higher financial needs when they make the transition to adulthood. Over 4 million children now have a Child Trust Fund account, which will ensure that at age 18, all young people will have access to a financial asset.

Package to support housing supply

A £600 million fund to unlock stalled housing sites and provide a kick-start to housebuilding was announced by the Chancellor today, to deliver up to an additional 10,000 homes in England over the next 2 years. This figure includes Barnett consequentials for the Devolved Administrations. This package includes £100m for local authorities to build new social housing at higher energy efficient standards. The current economic climate continues to have a significant impact on housing supply. Additional, short-term, spending during the downturn will stimulate housing development as well as boost the capacity of the house building industry in the long term.

Stamp Duty Land Tax Holiday

To provide continued support for homebuyers the Government is today extending the Stamp Duty Land Tax holiday for residential properties up to £175,000 until midnight on 31 December 2009. Around 60 per cent of purchases are currently exempt from paying stamp duty as a result of the holiday.

Offshore disclosure

A New Disclosure Opportunity (NDO) for holders of offshore accounts will run until March 2010. This will give holders of these accounts the opportunity to disclose, of their own accord, if they have unpaid tax or duties and to settle debts. HMRC is also seeking to issue notices requiring financial institutions to provide information about offshore account holders.

Publication of names of serious tax defaulters

The Government announces that is legislating for the publication by HMRC of the names of both corporate and individual taxpayers who incur a penalty because they have deliberately understated over £25,000 of tax.

Cross-border VAT changes 2010

New VAT rules on cross-border trading, from 1 January 2010, will ensure that UK VAT is charged on most services supplied to UK businesses, irrespective of the supplier's location, and provide a more efficient process for UK businesses wishing to recover VAT incurred in other EU countries. They include new reporting requirements to strengthen the strategy for tackling fraud using cross-border supplies of goods, and to ensure compliance with the new rules on services.

Alcohol duty rates

Budget 2009 confirms that, on 23 April 2009, alcohol duties will increase by 2 per cent, adding 1 penny to the price of a pint of beer, 13 pence to the price of a bottle of spirits and 4 pence to the price of a bottle of wine.

Tobacco duty rates

Budget 2009 announces that, on 22 April 2009, tobacco duties will increase by 2 per cent, adding 7 pence to the price of a packet of 20 cigarettes.

IMPROVING PUBLIC SERVICES

Since 1997, record levels of investment matched by reform have enabled the Government to deliver real and lasting improvements in Britain's public services.

The Government's short-term focus is on supporting employment and jobs through the recession. Budget 2009 announces new spending measures, including additional funding for Jobcentre Plus to avoid the problems associated with long-term unemployment that took hold in previous recessions; and that the September Guarantee of a place in education and training to every 16 and 17 year old who wants one will be met in full, an extra 54,500 student places in the next academic year.

At the same time, the Government is determined to do more to prepare Britain for the economic recovery, building the wealth and jobs of the future. Budget 2009 announces:

* a new £750 million Strategic Investment Fund to support advanced industrial projects of strategic importance, £250 million of this will be earmarked for low-carbon investment;

* £500 million of additional spending as part of an overall £1.4 billion package of targeted support to boost Britain's low-carbon sectors; and

* a further £600 million to increase housing supply, including through an extension to the shared equity scheme Homebuy Direct and additional social housing investment.

The Government will continue to invest in front-line public services alongside a stronger drive on value for money. Budget 2009 announces:

* £5 billion recoverable value for money savings in 2010-11, raising the 2007 Comprehensive Spending Review target from £30 billion to £35 billion, whilst maintaining in full the allocations planned for key front-line services;

* plans to increase the Government's target on relocating posts out of London to 24,000 by 2010;

* in the next Spending Review period, additional efficiencies to help support the economy and front-line services drawn from procurement, back office and IT, and property running costs, rising to £9 billion of additional efficiency savings by 2013-14; and

* new incentives and mechanisms with the aim of realising up to £16 billion of property and other asset sales in the three years from 2011-12, with proceeds used to supplement capital budgets.

Building on these reforms, Budget 2009 sets assumptions for spending growth from 2011-12 to 2013-14 which allow continued investment in public services whilst ensuring sustainable public finances in the medium term: with current spending growing by an average 0.7 per cent in real terms and public sector net investment moving to 11/4 per cent of GDP by 2013-14.

Further details on these and other measures are set out below:

2010-11 value for money savings and budget reductions

The 2008 Pre-Budget Report announced that the Government would increase its £30 billion 2007 Comprehensive Spending Review value for money target to £35 billion, delivering an additional £5 billion of recoverable value for money savings in 2010-11. Budget 2009 announces the departmental allocation of the £35 billion Value for Money target and adjustments to departmental budgets.

Budget 2009 also provides details on how these savings will be delivered, including by bringing forward savings identified by the Operational Efficiency Programme (OEP) and Public Value Programme (PVP). These savings will be delivered whilst maintaining in full the allocations planned for key front-line services including schools and local health services.

Operational Efficiency Programme

The Operational Efficiency Programme (OEP), led by five senior private and public sector advisors, published its final report on 21 April 2009. Budget 2009 announces the Government's acceptance of the recommendations in Operational Efficiency Programme: final report and will work with all departments to implement and deliver the additional value for money savings identified by the Programme.

The OEP has identified opportunities for a total of £15 billion of annual efficiency savings. Around £6 billion of this can be delivered as part of the Government's £35 billion value for money target in 2010-11 and the additional £9 billion by 2013-14. The delivery of the full £15 billion will take time to achieve, due to the nature of the areas being considered, but include savings in five cross-cutting areas:

* Back office operations and IT, led by Dr Martin Read, has found that £4 billion of savings a year are possible by improving the efficiency of back office operations, and £3.2 billion of savings a year on IT spending;

* Collaborative procurement, led Martin Jay, has found that £6.1 billion of savings a year are possible by harnessing the public sector's collective buying power;

* Asset management and sales, led by Gerry Grimstone, has concluded that there is potential to realise greater value from its asset base, and reports progress on studies into specific assets (including British Waterways, the Dartford Crossing, Land Registry and the QEII conference centre) launched at the 2008 Pre-Budget Report. He has also identified a number of further assets that will be the subject of a second wave of studies;

* Property, led by Lord Carter of Coles, has found that up to £1.5 billion of annual running cost efficiencies could be delivered by 2013-14, rising to £5 billion a year over a ten year period. Furthermore, £20 billion of disposal proceeds from property sales (excluding council housing) may be possible over ten years. To achieve this, he has recommended the creation of a small, strategic central property function to drive the efficiency and rationalisation agenda across the public sector;

* Local incentives and empowerment, led by Sir Michael Bichard, has made a series of recommendations aimed at empowering professionals to collaborate and innovate and creating the space for progress by reducing burdens on the frontline. This includes taking forward the new 'Total Place' initiative that will map flows of public spending in local areas to identify where public money can be spent more effectively.


The full report is available online at http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/vfm_operational_efficiency.htm and background reports on the back office and IT, collaborative procurement and property workstrands will be made available online shortly after Budget 2009.

BUILDING A LOW-CARBON RECOVERY

The UK has led the world in taking a strategic and long-term approach to the problem of climate change. Existing policies are already enabling £50 billion of low-carbon investment over the three years to 2011, and helping to support 900,000 jobs. Budget 2009 builds on these foundations and provides over £1.4 billion of extra targeted support in the low-carbon sector. Together with announcements made since last autumn, measures announced today will enable an additional £10.4 billion of lowcarbon sector and energy investment over three years, securing new jobs and new business, and placing the UK at the forefront of a worldwide low-carbon recovery.

To strengthen the long-term policy framework and give UK industry the confidence to invest in lowcarbon technologies, Budget 2009 sets the world's first carbon budgets, as required by the new Climate Change Act. These set a legally binding 34 per cent reduction in emissions by 2020, a new level of ambition for UK climate policy.

Saving energy is the easiest way to cut carbon emissions, saving households and businesses money on bills. Building on the one million homes insulated last year, Budget 2009 announces an additional £375 million to support energy and resource efficiency in businesses, public buildings and households over the next two years, and £70 million for decentralised small-scale and community low-carbon energy. Together, these measures will support employment, and save 380,000 tCO2 and around £60 million in energy bills each year.

Meeting carbon budgets will require a transformation of the way the UK meets its energy needs. The Government's existing framework will enable a ten-fold increase in renewable investment by 2020. To protect investment and jobs in low-carbon energy, and to strengthen the long-term framework for a low-carbon energy future, Budget 2009 announces:

* £405 million to support low-carbon industries and advanced green manufacturing, to help make the UK a worldwide leader;

* that UK renewable and energy projects stand to benefit from up to £4 billion of new capital from the European Investment Bank, removing blockages in project financing;

* an uplift in support for offshore wind investments that reach financial close between now and 2011 through the Renewables Obligation. This is expected to support £9 billion of investment and power up to 2.8 million homes;

* extending support for combined heat and power through climate change levy exemptions, helping bring forward £2.5 billion of investment and 3 GW of capacity by 2015, and supporting employment; and

* a new funding mechanism to support up to four carbon capture and storage demonstration projects, and £90 million to fund detailed preparatory studies.

To support the public finances, while also driving the move to a low-carbon and resource-efficient economy, Budget 2009 announces:

* an increase in fuel duty of 2 pence per litre on 1 September 2009, and of 1 penny per litre in real terms each year from 2010 to 2013. This will contribute to mediumterm fiscal consolidation, and save 2 MtCO2 per year by 2013-14; and

* a continued increase in the standard rate of landfill tax by £8 per tonne on 1 April each year from 2011 to 2013, to reduce landfill in a sustainable way by encouraging further investment into alternative waste management options.

Further details on these and other measures are set out below:

UK carbon budgets

Today the Government announces that it will set the UK's first three five-year carbon budgets - covering the period from 2008 to 2022 - at levels requiring a 34 per cent cut in greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 with respect to 1990. Representing a step change in the Government's level of ambition on climate change, this new target puts the UK on track to achieve its long-term goal of cutting emissions by 80 per cent by 2050. The Government will aim to meet these carbon budgets through domestic reductions alone in the non-traded sector, without using offset credits.

Building a low carbon economy: implementing the Climate Change Act, published alongside Budget, sets out in more detail the level of the first three carbon budgets, how Government will measure progress towards carbon budgets, and the Government's high-level response to the advice of the Committee on Climate Change.

Support for energy and resource efficiency

The Government today announces £375 million over the next two years for energy and resource efficiency in business, public buildings and households.

Support for renewable energy projects

The Government today announces new measures to protect investment and jobs in low-carbon energy, including:

* an uplift in support for offshore wind projects under the Renewable Obligation, worth £3.5 billion over the lifetime of the projects, protecting up to £9 billion of investment;

* UK energy projects stand to benefit from up to £4 billion in new capital from the European Investment Bank, easing blockages in project financing.

Low-carbon energy infrastructure

The Government today announces £405 million to support the development of a world-leading low-carbon energy and advanced green manufacturing sector in the UK.

This will be delivered through existing schemes such as the Environmental Transformation Fund, and as part of the Strategic Investment Fund set aside for support in strategic sectors such as low-carbon. This will help establish the UK as a world-wide leader in renewables technology and advanced green manufacturing.

Carbon capture and storage

The deployment of carbon capture and storage (CCS) will be key to the move towards a low-carbon energy supply. CCS is the process of capturing carbon dioxide from fossil fuels and then storing instead of releasing it into the atmosphere.

The Government announces that it will put in place a levy mechanism for up to four new CCS demonstration projects, driving significant private investment and making the UK a global leader in this crucial technology.

The Government also announces £90 million to fund post-combustion coal engineering and design studies. These will ensure that preparations for construction of a full-scale CCS demonstration begin at the earliest possible date and will generate useful know-how that will be made available to promote a global understanding of CCS.

Combined heat and power

Combined heat and power (CHP) generates useable heat and power in a single process and represents more efficient use of both fossil and renewable fuels. At the large industrial scale, CHP can act as a catalyst for the economic development of the nearby area by attracting businesses with a heavy demand for heat or steam.

The Budget announces that the Government will extend the climate change levy exemption for indirect sales of electricity from combined heat and power (CHP) beyond 2013 to 2023, subject to State aid approval, and also commits to continue other levy exemptions for CHP. This package of support will help investors to plan with confidence for the future and is expected to bring forward investments of around £2.5 billion, which will increase CHP capacity by 3GW by 2015, and promote significant employment opportunities in the sector. By 2020, these measures have the potential to deliver 7GW of new CHP generation capacity, and reduce emissions by 3.2 MtCO2.

Fuel Duty

As announced at Budgets 2007 and 2008, and confirmed at the 2008 Pre-Budget Report, main fuel duty rose by 1.84 pence per litre on 1 April 2009. The main fuel duty rate is therefore now 54.19 pence per litre.

To contribute towards the consolidation of the public finances, Budget 2009 announces that main fuel duty will increase by 2 pence per litre on 1 September 2009, and by a further 1 penny per litre in real terms each year from 2010 to 2013. Duty on rebated oils will increase in proportion to main fuel duty increases on the same dates. This will also help to reduce polluting emissions, saving 2 million tonnes of carbon dioxide per year by 2013-14.

Company Car Tax

In response to advances in vehicle technology and falling new-car CO2 emissions, Budget 2009 announces that, with effect from 6 April 2011:

* the CO2 emissions thresholds for main CCT bands will be shifted down by 5g CO2 per km;

* the £80,000 cap on company car list prices for the purposes of calculating company car benefit will be abolished, to ensure that drivers of the most expensive company cars pay a fair amount of tax; and

* outdated discounts for early-uptake Euro 4 standard diesel cars, higher-emitting hybrid vehicles, gas-powered and biofuel-capable cars will be abolished, in favour of a system that simply rewards lower tailpipe CO2 emissions.

Landfill tax rates

Landfill tax remains a cornerstone of waste management policy in the UK. By increasing the costs of sending waste to landfill, the tax encourages use of, and investment in, sustainable alternative treatment options, such as sorting machinery, recycling and anaerobic digestion.

Budget 2009 announces that the standard rate of landfill tax will increase by £8 per tonne on 1 April each year from 2011 to 2013, further incentivising investment in alternatives to landfill, and leading to emissions savings of 0.7 MtCO2e. Budget 2009 also announces that the lower rate, applying to inactive wastes will be frozen at £2.50 per tonne for 2010-11.

Cushion Gas Storage

Following calls for clarification on the tax treatment of cushion gas in gas storage facilities, Government today confirms that cushion gas is eligible for plant and machinery allowances. This announcement will give the industry the clarity and certainty they need to bring forward gas storage projects to meet the UK's gas storage requirements.