During last week’s mini-Budget, The Chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng made extensive changes to taxation.
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Corporation Tax rise axed as Chancellor aims for growth
Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-Budget has scrapped a planned rise in Corporation Tax as part of a wide-ranging raft of tax-cutting measures announced last week.
Government’s mini-Budget giveaway to businesses may take a gamble on inflation, says Rotherham Taylor Limited
Preston-based accountancy firm Rotherham Taylor Limited has said many businesses will be pleased with the Chancellor’s support during the cost-of-living crisis.
However, wider concerns persist about the potential for rocketing inflation, which could harm economic growth and heavily indebted businesses.
Standing to address Parliament, Kwasi Kwarteng said the measures in his fiscal statement were “a new approach for a new era focused on growth”.
What followed was one of the most significant fiscal events in recent years, as the Government announced measures to support individual taxpayers, high-earning business owners and the companies that they run.
The Chancellor confirmed that the Corporation Tax rise planned for April 2023 would be scrapped and that this rate of tax would remain at 19 per cent.
He also announced that the previous 1.25 percentage point increase to National Insurance introduced earlier this year would be reversed and the planned Health and Social Care levy abolished – freeing up cash for many businesses.
The existing £1 million Annual Investment Allowance will also be retained permanently, instead of falling to £200,000 from March 2023 to support additional investment in plant and machinery.
To further support investment the Government announced the creation of up to 40 tax-free investment zones, which will come with a wide range of benefits for those based within them.
Rebecca Bradshaw, Director at Rotherham Taylor Limited, said: “The measures announced by the Chancellor represent one of the biggest tax cuts in 50 years, with estimates suggesting that £45 billion worth of tax reductions will be on offer to SMEs and their owners, as well as many other taxpayers.
“The scrapping of the Corporation Tax increase, a permanent boost to the Annual Investment Allowance and support with rising costs through a reverse to the National Insurance rise will, the Chancellor hopes, boost the UK’s economic growth rate by 2.5 per cent and increase spending and tax receipts.”
Many individual taxpayers will also benefit from the Chancellor’s announcement through cuts to Income Tax, Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) and for contractors, a repeal of the IR35 rules.
Under a landmark change to Income Tax, the additional rate of tax, paid at 45 per cent on earnings over £150,000 will be removed and a 1p cut to the basic rate of tax on earnings between £12,571 to £50,270 will come into force from April next year.
Many business owners on higher incomes will welcome this change, along with the scrapping of the 1.25 percentage point increase to the Dividend Tax rate.
Meanwhile, those looking to purchase a new home will enjoy increased SDLT thresholds, which will rise from £125,000 to £250,000 on most property purchases, and from £300,000 to £425,000 for first-time buyers.
“Describing these measures as a ‘mini-Budget’ is somewhat misleading given the considerable tax cuts and support offered to taxpayers, SMEs and many larger businesses,” said Rebecca.
“This should help with the cost-of-living crisis and will hopefully encourage greater business investment in years to come.”
The Government promised that the Energy Bill Relief Scheme, announced days before, would help to lower inflation by as much as five percentage points in the mid-term by capping energy costs for businesses and individuals.
However, there are concerns among economists and the Bank of England that the tax cuts announced in the Chancellor’s speech will not only drive up national debt through borrowing but also encourage price increases in the wider economy further driving up inflation.
Rebecca added: “By choosing to go for growth, rather than maintain a policy of fiscal responsibility the Government is taking a real gamble.
“If interest rates continue to rise due to growing inflation, then the support outlined in the mini-Budget may not amount to as much as hoped.”
To find out more about Rotherham Taylor Limited’s wide range of accounting, tax and business advisory services, please visit www.rtaccoutants.co.uk
Fiscal Statement
With a new King at the Palace and a new Prime Minister at Number 10, it was no surprise that the new Chancellor at Number 11 used his first statement to the House of Commons to signal a “new era” for fiscal policy.
It turned out to be a striking change of direction, as the Chancellor opened his speech, saying: “We will be bold and unashamed in pursuing growth, even where that means taking difficult decisions”.
Gone was the Sunak era’s post-Covid emphasis on fiscal responsibility. Instead, in what the Government dubbed its ‘Plan for Growth’, Kwasi Kwarteng set out an approach prioritising tax cuts for individuals and businesses over immediate repairs to the public finances.
The Chancellor’s assumption is that cutting tax rates will boost economic growth and so increase the overall tax take.
This was Mr Kwarteng’s first real test as Chancellor, 18 days into the job, with inflation sitting at 9.9 per cent and energy prices spiking, interest rates rising, a weakened pound, plus the economic recovery from Covid by no means complete.
Only a day earlier, the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee had raised interest rates sharply by half a percentage point to 2.25 per cent – the highest level in eight years – in a bid to stave off spiking inflation.
Despite being a Fiscal Statement rather than a Budget, the policies trailed in the days and weeks running up to the speech suggested that it might prove to be more significant an event than many full Budgets.
- Income Tax
- National Insurance Contributions/ Health and Social Care Levy
- IR35 off-payroll working rules
- Corporation Tax
- Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT)
- Annual Investment Allowance (AIA) and SEIS
- Investment Zones
- Energy Bills
- Conclusion
In a speech full of significant announcements, perhaps the most notable related to Income Tax.
The Chancellor announced that the Additional Rate of Income Tax, which is currently 45 per cent on income over £150,000 will be scrapped entirely.
He then moved to bring forward the cut in the Basic Rate of Income Tax to 19 per cent planned for April 2024 to April 2023.
National Insurance Contributions/ Health and Social Care Levy
Another landmark policy of the Johnson Government was the 1.25 per cent Health and Social Care Levy paid by employees and employers to help meet the cost of social care.
The current tax year is a transitional year in which the increase has been applied to National Insurance Contributions and it was to have become a standalone tax from April 2023.
Now, the Chancellor has announced that the charge will be scrapped and will no longer apply from 6 November 2022.
He said the reason for the move was to support smaller businesses, help households and boost economic growth.
IR35 off-payroll working rules
In an unexpected move, the Chancellor announced that the reforms to the IR35 off-payroll working rules in 2017 and 2021 for individual contractors operating via personal service companies in the public and private sectors respectively would be scrapped.
The change means that it will no longer be the responsibility of the organisation engaging contractors’ services to determine whether a contractor should pay tax on the same basis as an employee. Instead, that responsibility will revert to the contractor, as was the case previously.
Cancellation of planned Corporation Tax increase
The last Chancellor but one, Rishi Sunak, had announced a plan to increase the rate of Corporation Tax from 19 per cent to 25 per cent from April 2023 for companies with profits of more than £250,000. Those with profits of between £50,000 and £250,000 would have benefitted from tapered relief, while there would have been no increase for those with profits of £50,000 or less.
In a striking change from the previous Government’s policy, and consistent with the Prime Minister’s leadership campaign pledge, Mr Kwarteng announced that the planned increase will no longer go ahead and Corporation Tax rates will remain at 19 per cent.
He said that the rationale for the change is to encourage the investment needed to help the economy grow.
In what might prove to become a tug of war between the Treasury and the Bank of England, just a day after many homeowners learned of a painful interest rate rise, the Chancellor offered substantial consolation in the form of a cut to Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT).
Indeed, just yesterday, the Governor of the Bank of England wrote to the Chancellor to warn him that tax cuts might mean even sharper interest rate rises.
Undeterred, the Chancellor pressed ahead with a move to double the SDLT threshold from £125,000 to £250,000 with immediate effect. For first-time buyers, the threshold will rise to £425,000 on properties of up to £625,000. The measure will apply permanently.
Annual Investment Allowance (AIA) and SEIS
In another surprise move, the Chancellor announced that the Annual Investment Allowance (AIA) would not fall back to £200,000 in 2023 but would instead remain at its current £1 million level permanently.
Meanwhile, he said there would be a two-thirds increase in the amount companies can raise through the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme (SEIS) to £250,000 from April 2023. At the same time, the Annual Investor Limit will rise to £200,000.
The Chancellor also announced the launch of up to 40 Investment Zones. In England, he said the Government is considering time-limited tax incentives for 10 years, including 100 per cent Business Rates relief, 100 per cent first-year allowances for qualifying expenditure of plant and machinery and an enhanced Structures and Buildings Allowance.
He said the Government is also considering zero-rate Employer National Insurance Contributions (NICs) on salaries of new employees in Investment Zones up to £50,270 a year, as well as full Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) relief on land and building bought for commercial or new residential development.
The Chancellor said he will work with the Devolved Administrations to offer similar incentives in Investment Zones across the UK.
Following on from the Prime Minister’s announcement on 8 September of the Energy Price Guarantee and the Secretary of State for Business, Energy, Innovation and Skills in relation to business energy costs, the Chancellor reiterated the support being offered.
He said that the Energy Price Guarantee, alongside the £400 credit already announced will cut bills by around £1,400 for a typical household in comparison to the levels they were expected to reach without Government action.
Meanwhile, he confirmed that businesses, charities and public sector organisations will benefit from equivalent relief if they had not locked into a fixed-rate tariff by April 2022. That measure will last for six months from 1 October 2022.
The Chancellor said that the Government’s intervention will reduce inflation by around five percentage points.
The speech was a dramatic statement of the fiscal philosophy being pursued by the new occupants of Number 10 and Number 11 Downing Street. They hope that by reining in energy bills and cutting taxes, consumers will be prompted to spend and businesses will be more likely to invest, ultimately benefitting the public finances through increased tax receipts.
Whether that’s likely to be the case will be a point of serious contention amongst economists and various factions of the Conservative Party, especially given rising inflation and the possible impact on interest rates. Many will see the measures as a serious gamble.
What is certain, however, is that businesses will be more interested in what actually comes to pass than any abstract debate about whether the Government is taking the best course of action.
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