March 2010 United Kingdom budget

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 () March 2010 United Kingdom Budget
Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (HM Government).svg
Presented24 March 2010 (Wednesday)
Parliament 54th
Party Labour
Chancellor Alistair Darling
Total revenue£541 billion
Total expenditures£704 billion
Deficit £163 billion
  2009
June 2010  

The March 2010 United Kingdom Budget, official known as Budget 2010: Securing the recovery, was delivered by Alistair Darling, Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the House of Commons on 24 March 2010. [1]

Contents

The budget speech outlined the Labour Government's fiscal policies prior to the 2010 general election, which had to be called before July.

The Budget's main headlines included:

The Chancellor aimed for public sector net borrowing to fall to 8.5% of GDP by 2011-12, and 4.0% by 2014-15. Public sector net debt was projected to increase to 73% of GDP by 2012-13.

The Treasury published the Finance Act 2010 on 1 April, running to 240 pages. [4] After the General Election was called on 6 April, the Chartered Institute of Taxation expressed concern at the lack of time for debate on complex measures. [5] In the event, many of the clauses announced in the Budget speech were dropped from the Bill before Parliament was dissolved. [6]

Taxes

Receipts2010-10 Revenues (£bn)
Income Tax146
Value Added Tax (VAT)78
National Insurance97
Excise duties46
Corporate Tax42
Council Tax26
Business rates25
Other81
Total Government revenue541

Spending

Department2010-10 Expenditure (£bn)
Social protection196
Health122
Education89
Debt interest43
Defence40
Public order and safety36
Personal social services33
Housing and Environment27
Transport22
Industry, agriculture and employment20
Other74
Total Government spending704

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References

  1. "Budget 2010". BBC News. 24 March 2010. Retrieved 24 March 2010.
  2. HM Treasury, Budget 2010 Annex C
  3. Chancellor set to announce basic bank accounts for all Archived 2013-01-16 at archive.today allaboutmoney.com, 24 September 2012
  4. Finance Bill out with just days to make it law Archived 2010-04-05 at the Wayback Machine , Accountancy Age, 1 April 2010
  5. Just a few hours of scrutiny for Finance Bill as Election announced Archived 2012-07-19 at archive.today , Accountancy Age, 6 April 2010
  6. Finance Bill carved out in deadline scramble Archived 2010-04-12 at the Wayback Machine , Accountancy Age, 7 April 2010