2011 Autumn Statement - UPDATED
On Tuesday 29th November the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) published its updated forecast for the UK economy. Chancellor George Osborne responded to that forecast in a statement to the House of Commons later on that day.
In the period since the Budget in March a number of consultation papers and discussion documents have been published by HMRC.
This summary also provides a reminder of other key developments which are to take place from April 2012.
Update
Following the publication ofthe Finance Bill 2012 draft clauses and explanatory notes on 6 December, the following content has beem updated.
The Chancellor's statement
The Chancellor emphasised that the OBR does not predict a recession in Britain but they have revised down their short term growth prospects for the country. He also made clear that the OBR central forecast assumes 'the euro finds a way through the current crisis'.
General measures
The Autumn Statement sets out the actions the Government will take in two main areas:
- protecting the economy and
- building a stronger economy for the future.
In order to maintain economic stability and meet its fiscal rules, the Government will, for example:
- set plans for public spending in 2015/16 and 2016/17 in line with the spending reductions over the Spending Review 2010 period
- raise the State Pension age to 67 between April 2026 and April 2028
- set public sector pay awards at an average of 1% for each of the two years after the current pay freeze comes to an end.
The growth plans include the publication of a National Infrastructure Plan 2011. The plan sets out a pipeline of over 500 infrastructure projects including:
- introducing a new approach to financing infrastructure, by obtaining £20 billion of private investment from pension funds
- investing over £1 billion to tackle areas of congestion and improve the national road network
- investing more than £1.4 billion in railway infrastructure and commuter links
- investing £100 million to create up to ten 'super-connected cities' across the UK, with 80-100 megabits per second broadband and city-wide high-speed mobile coverage.
Comment
The proposal to raise the state pension age is expected to save around £60 billion in today's prices between 2026/27 and 2035/36.
The aim of the National Infrastructure Plan is to kick start the economy by accelerating infrastructure projects with a view to job retention/creation. Time will tell how successful the new strategy is.
Disclaimer
This summary is published for the information of clients. It provides only an overview of the Autumn Statement and previous announcements. No action should be taken without consulting the detailed legislation or seeking professional advice. Therefore no responsibility for loss occasioned by any person acting or refraining from action as a result of the material contained in this summary can be accepted by the authors or the firm.
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