Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
FAQ: UK budget 2018, the end of austerity?
FAQ: UK budget 2018, the end of austerity?
Apr 19, 2026 10:28 PM

“Austerity ing to an end,” Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond announced as he unveiled a budget laden with significant spending increases before the UK Parliament this afternoon. Here are the facts you need to know:

What are the total numbers?

The budget includes £842 billion in Total Managed Expenditure (TME) for 2019-2020. Borrowing during the same time will reach £31.8 billion. Government spending will remain at a projected 38 percent of GDP for the next five years. “Over the next five years, total public investment is growing 30 percent, to its highest sustained level in 40 years, and will on average be an astonishing £460 million a week higher, in real terms, than under the last Labour government,” Hammond said. The deficit is forecast to fall to 0.8 percent of GDP by 2023-2024 fiscal year, down from 9.9 percent in 2009 and 1.9 percent in 2017-18.

What are the most significant aspects of the budget?

The budget demonstrates a marked increase in spending over the next five years, as well as other policy changes including:

an £84 billion increase in NHS spending over five years, which was announced this summer;a massive boost to implement Universal Credit, as well as increasing the amount of money people may earn before losing benefits;a new Digital Services Tax panies like Amazon;cutting personal taxes and decreasing the number of people who pay higher rate tax, one year ahead of schedule;half-a-billion pounds in Brexit emergency preparations;raising the National Living Wage;abolishing Private Financial Initiatives (PFIs) and Private Finance 2 (PF2) contracts for future projects;increasing spending on defence, counterterrorism, schools, mental health, and social care; andlow estimates for future economic growth.

How large is the NHS funding increase?

“In June, [Prime Minister Theresa May] announced the single largest mitment to our public services ever made by a peacetime government: an £84-billion, five-year deal for our precious NHS, half as much again as the increase Labour offered the NHS at the last election,” Hammond said. It is a £20.5 million increase over the next five years.

How does the budget affect Universal Credit?

Universal Credit replaced a patchwork of government aid programs with one government benefits payment in the name of efficiency. However, it reduced the amount of money workers could earn before losing government benefits, and glitches at the program’s rollout left the program unpopular. “Universal Credit is here to stay,” Hammond said, and the budget doubles down on his promise. It allots £1 billion over the next five years to implement the program and another provision, which allows workers to earn an additional £1,000 a year without losing benefits, is expected to cost the Treasury £1.7 billion more.

What is the “Digital Services Tax,” and how does the budget address tax avoidance?

A national scandal erupted when Amazon, which earned £72.4 million in profits last year, paid only £1.7 million in taxes by following a government incentive to give its employees shares in its valuable stock. Hammond announced he will imposed a new Digital Services Tax on “established tax giants” who make at least£500 million in global revenue. The tax will take effect in April 2020 and is forecast to raise £400 million annually. The move had been endorsed by Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, among others.

“It is only right that these global giants, with profitable businesses in the UK, pay their fair share towards supporting our public services,” Hammond said. He plans to squeeze another £2 billion that would have otherwise slipped through HMRC’s hands by tax avoidance and/or tax evasion. Hammond alluded to additional lobbying for OECD nations to take unified action to find “a globally agreed solution” to employers fleeing high-tax states.

How will personal e taxes be cut?

The Conservative Party delivered early on two promises in its manifesto: The Personal Tax Allowance will increase from £11,850 to £12,500 next April. (more than 1 million no longer paying taxes). A UK resident may earn £50,000 before meeting the Higher Rate Threshold, up from £46,350. The party’s manifesto pledged to meet these targets by 2020, plishing their goal one year early.

The reforms mean that 1.7 million Britons will no longer pay any personal e tax, and an additional million will pay a lower tax rate.

How does Brexit impact the 2018 budget?

Hammond acknowledged this week that his budget – the last before Brexit – assumes the UK will sign an “average-type free trade deal”with the European Union. However, he allocated an additional half-a-billion pounds for Brexit emergency preparations, in the event no deal emerges, and £2.2 billion for Brexit preparations overall. In such an event, Hammond said, he would have to “revisit” the entirety of the budget.

What is the prognosis for Private Financial Initiatives (PFIs) and Private Finance 2 (PF2) projects?

“I can announce that the government will abolish the use of PFI and PF2 for future projects,” Hammond said, “putting another legacy of Labour behind us.” PFIs became a point of controversy after the collapse of Carillion, a mammoth pany that received £1.3 billion in new government contracts despite being designated as a “high risk” firm. Critics say these public-private partnerships represent a form of crony capitalism, with sweetheart contracts going to panies. For more background, see Philip Booth’s article on PFIs.

What about jobs, entrepreneurs, small businesses, and apprenticeships?

“This government has prioritised getting people into work because the best way to help people is to provide them with the stability of a pay packet every month,” Hammond said. The Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR) forecast the economy will add 800,000 jobs over the next five years, increasing labor force participation. To further employment growth, the government unveiled a £695 million package to support apprenticeships.

The budget also raises the UK’s minimum wage, the National Living Wage, by 38 pence from £7.83 to £8.21, beginning next April. OBR had already forecast wages would rise until 2023. Critics warn the National Living Wage actually reduces employment, especially for less educated and lower-skilled workers, and raises prices for consumers.

How does the budget deal with defence and national security?

The budget significantly increases spending for defence and national security. Hammond announced a £1 billion increase for the Ministry of Defence, as well as £160 in counter-terrorism training for local police forces, which face a metastasizing terrorist threat.

What about environmental or other “sin taxes”?

Hammond announced the government will impose a new tax on all plastic packaging that includes less than 30 percent recycled material; however, the implementation has not yet been determined.

He is also freezing fuel taxes for the ninth year in a row, saving £1,000 for each car driver and £2,500 for everyone driving a van. The government duty on beer, cider, and spirits will be frozen for another year. But the tobacco tax will rise at the rate of inflation plus two percent. Wine duty will increase, as anticipated, and white ciders will be taxed at a new, higher rate. “Sin taxes” create unforeseen consequences, like smuggling that finances criminal gangs and even terrorist organizations, if they are too high.

What is the outlook for overall economic growth during the next five years?

GDP growth is forecast to remain between 1.3 and 1.6 percent until 2023.

Does this budget actually end “austerity”?

“Under this Conservative government, austerity ing to an end, but discipline will remain,” Hammond said, contrasting the Tories with “the Corbyn Party.” Free-market advocates would debate whether “austerity” properly describes UK budgets since 2010. Meanwhile, Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn dismissed the budget as a collection of “half-measures and quick-fixes.”

The 2018 budget certain spends more money. Government tax receipts came in higher than expected by the last public forecast, the Spring Statement; however, the new budget anticipates the debt levels will remain virtually identical. Theresa May’s government is spending the difference, rather than paying off the nation’s £1.8 trillion national debt.

Why should Christians care about a national budget?

The national budget significantly impact the national and personal well-being of all citizens. The manded the prophet Jeremiah, “Seek the welfare of the city where I have sent you into exile, andpray to theLordon its behalf, for in its welfare you will find your welfare” (Jeremiah 29:7, ESV). Christians should support policies that increase national prosperity, benefit families, and encourage people to use their God-given gifts for productive ends.

This budget is of particular interest, as the intervention of Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby appears to have resulted in the government creating a new tax to quell public outrage. This indicates the importance of Christian leaders speaking out on the moral aspects of economics and may augur new outcries panies resisting paying a tax level individual prelates deem “sufficient.”

Office of Budget Responsibility. This photo has been modified. Public domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
‘Making Development Work’
A wide ranging piece in Policy Review by Robert W. Han and Paul C. Tetlock examines current aid practices, suggests the implementation of “information markets,” and looks at how such markets might impact current policy analyses like the Copenhagen Consensus and the UN’s Millennium Development Goals (MDG). The MDG are the nearly exclusive focus of the ONE Campaign, and the failings of the MDG as such e closely tied to the failings of the ONE Campaign. The authors write of...
Space tourism
In an interview with The Space Review Richard Garriott, vice-chairman of Space Adventures discusses the possibilities of space tourism and the potential market in the United States. Garriott describes Space Adventures as currently an [travel] agent, and we have millions of dollars in cash paid reservations for sub orbital flights. But with few or no suborbital space lines to book today, we are working to ensure they exist and that may mean SA invests in that eventuality. Garriott looks forward...
Where does G.I. Joe shop?
In a FoxNews article, Jack Spencer of the Heritage Foundation reveals some interesting finds from their year-long study of the military industry: US Defense relies heavily on a global free market for its equipment. This may seem to fly in the face of the idea that if anyone ought to buy American, it is the American government. But as Spencer points out Congress has tried repeatedly over the years to steer defense contracts in directions that would supposedly shore up...
Benedict and World Youth Day: Becoming adults in Christ
Pope Benedict’s highly publicized trip to Germany for this week’s World Youth Day stands as an opportunity for the event to, in the words of Kishore Jayabalan, engage “serious theological and intellectual work.” The pope’s ing means, “If there is a place to show how the Christian faith shaped Europe and formed heroic persons even in its darkest hours, this is it.” Read the full text of mentary. ...
If at first you don’t succeed…
…You might be a Member of Congress: Members of Congress want to establish a new government-backed venture capital program… OK, but what’s the catch? …to replace one that’s being phased out because of sizable losses. I wonder if they’ve considered whether the Government should even be involved in the venture capital business in the first place? Hat Tip: Don Luskin ...
Church and governance in Nigeria
A promising brief recognizing the critical role of civil society in Nigeria, and especially that the Christian church, from Ecumenical News International: Nigerian president urges African churches: Play part in governance Abuja (ENI). Nigerian President, Olusegun Obasanjo has urged African church leaders to e key players in the process of achieving good governance in the continent. “The Church must be a critical partner in the on-going efforts at strengthening the structures of democratic governance, and bringing about sustained development in...
The idol of nationalism
What Amrith Lal calls patriotism in this piece from the Times of India is probably more accurately called nationalism, but the point is well-taken nonetheless. The brief essay begins: As practised in our times, it is religion at its worst. The canons of morality and logic are lost on it. All that is expected of the patriot is blind devotion to an abstract entity called the state or whatever that symbolises the state. Needless to say, the state can never...
Debunking the preservationist myth
An article from Nature examines how even human activity as inherently destructive as military exercises can actually boost biodiversity. In “Military exercises ‘good for endangered species,'” Michael Hopkin writes of the results of a study conducted following US military exercises in Germany. Ecologist Steven Warren of Colorado State University says that “military land can host more species than agricultural land.” And “What’s more, its biodiversity can also exceed that of natural parks, where species that need disturbance cannot get a...
Ecumenical leader murdered
Brother Roger, founder of the ecumenical munity, Taize, was murdered yesterday while praying. Details here. Brother Roger founded Taize in 1940. ...
Fa(s)t food
There’s yet more evidence that supports my claim, “Besieged by the media and public opinion, quick-service restaurants have got the reputation for being unhealthy. But the truth of the matter is plex. Franchises that have put an emphasis on providing healthy foods have done well…. And as usual, the service industry has responded quickly and efficiently to customer demands.” The AP reports, “Inspired by the documentary ‘Super Size Me,’ Merab Morgan decided to give a fast-food-only diet a try. The...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved