2016 United Kingdom budget

2016 (2016) United Kingdom budget
Presented Wednesday 16 March 2016
Parliament 56th
Party Conservative Party
Chancellor George Osborne
Total revenue £716 billion ($1.09 trillion)
Total expenditures £772 billion ($1.18 trillion)
Deficit £56 billion ($85.56 billion)
Website 2016 UK Budget
2017 ›

The 2016 United Kingdom budget was delivered by George Osborne, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the House of Commons on Wednesday, 16 March 2016.[1]

It was the second fully Conservative budget delivered by Osborne, after the July 2015 budget.

The 2016 Budget was also Osborne's last as Chancellor, as he was replaced by Philip Hammond on 13th July of that year by way of Theresa May's cabinet reshuffle.

Background

In the November 2015 Autumn Statement, the independent Office for Budget Responsibility predicted that the UK economy would grow by 2.4% in 2016.[2]

Budget announcements

201617 taxes and spending

Taxes

Receipts 2016-2017 revenues. [10]
Income Tax 182
Value Added Tax (VAT) 138
National Insurance 126
Excise duties 48
Corporate Tax 43
Council Tax 30
Business rates 28
Other 120
Total Government revenue 716

Spending

Department 2016-2017 Expenditure.[11]
Social protection 240
Health 145
Education 102
Debt interest 39
Defence 46
Public order and safety 34
Personal social services 30
Housing and Environment 34
Transport 29
Industry, agriculture and employment 24
Other 49
Total Government spending 772

Reactions

The Leader of the Opposition, Jeremy Corbyn, described the budget as having "unfairness at its very core", singling out cuts to disability benefits and corporate tax for particular criticism. However, he expressed his approval for the introduction of the sugar levy in his House of Commons response.[12]

Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, Iain Duncan Smith, resigned two days after the presentation of the budget, describing planned cuts within his department "as a compromise too far".[13]

See also

References

  1. HM Treasury (1 December 2015). "Budget 2016 - Chancellor announces date". gov.uk. GOV.UK.
  2. Penny, Thomas (25 November 2015). "U.K. 2016 economic growth forecast raised to 2.4%, Osborne says". Bloomberg News.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Staff writer (March 2016). "Budget 2016 summary: Key points at-a-glance". BBC News. BBC.
  4. Whale, Sebastian (16 March 2016). "George Osborne to announce £100m to tackle homelessness". PoliticsHome. Dod's Parliamentary Communications.
  5. Pennells, Sarah. "Budget 2016 - how are you affected?". SavvyWoman. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  6. 1 2 Staff writer (16 March 2016). "Cigarette prices in UK will be subject to 'effective floor'". Financial Times. Nikkei. (subscription required (help)).
  7. Staff writer (16 March 2016). "Budget 2016: Fuel duty frozen for sixth year in a row". BBC News. BBC.
  8. Staff writer (17 March 2016). "Deal reached to scrap 'tampon tax', officials say". BBC News. BBC.
  9. Staff writer (16 March 2016). "Budget 2016: Severn bridge tolls to be halved". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 19 March 2016.
  10. HM Treasury, "Government spending and revenue: Chart 2: Public sector receipts 2016-17", in HM Treasury, Budget 2016 (pdf), London: HMSO, p. 6, ISBN 9781474129572.
  11. HM Treasury, "Government spending and revenue: Chart 1: Public sector spending 2016-17", in HM Treasury, Budget 2016 (pdf), London: HMSO, p. 5, ISBN 9781474129572.
  12. Staff writer (16 March 2016). "Budget 2016: Jeremy Corbyn attacks Osborne's 'failure'". BBC News. BBC.
  13. Staff writer (19 March 2016). "Iain Duncan Smith quits over planned disability benefit changes". BBC News. BBC.
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