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Autumn Budget 2021
- 28th October 2021
- Posted by: shayne
- Category: Autumn Statement
No CommentsINTRODUCTION “Today’s Budget does not draw a line under COVID-19; we have challenging months ahead”, said Chancellor Rishi Sunak. Chancellor Rishi Sunak resisted temptation to raise taxes to start paying for the emergency support schemes that kept so many businesses afloat during the pandemic in 2020/21. Instead, Sunak continues to bask in the warm glow
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The case of the missing Budget
- 15th November 2019
- Posted by: shayne
- Category: Autumn Statement
The case of the missing Budget Introduction It’s been an eventful few years in British politics, but 2019 has been something else again with one jolt after another. The 29 March deadline for the UK to leave the EU was extended to 31 October and then again until 31 January 2020. Boris Johnson replaced Theresa
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2018 Budget Report
- 1st November 2018
- Posted by: shayne
- Category: Autumn Statement
Is Austerity Finally Coming to an End? Going into Budget 2018, between leaks and political instability, few expected Chancellor Philip Hammond would have surprises left to spring. How wrong we were. Download our full report here.
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Autumn Budget 2017
- 23rd November 2017
- Posted by: shayne
- Category: Autumn Statement
Introduction Chancellor Philip Hammond said he’d take a “balanced approach” to his second Budget of 2017. Once again the speech was light on headline-grabbing finance changes and there were no ‘giveaways’ or major surprises. Instead, the chancellor focussed on measures to prepare the economy for post-Brexit life. Raising productivity is key to boosting economic growth
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Autumn Statement 2016
- 24th November 2016
- Posted by: shayne
- Category: Autumn Statement
Autumn Statement 2016 Introduction The first major economic statement since the EU referendum focused on measures to "prepare our economy to be resilient as we exit the EU". Unsurprisingly, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) forecasts for growth have changed since the last figures were published in March. The prediction for 2016 is 2.1%, slightly