March 2017 United Kingdom budget

Last updated

2017 (2017) United Kingdom budget
Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (HM Government).svg
PresentedWednesday 8 March 2017
Parliament 56th
Party Conservative Party
Chancellor Philip Hammond
Total revenue£744 billion
Total expenditures£802 billion
Deficit £58 billion (2.9% of GDP)
Website
  2016

The March 2017 United Kingdom budget was delivered by Philip Hammond, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the House of Commons on Wednesday, 8 March 2017. The last budget to be held in the spring until 2020, it was Hammond's first as Chancellor of the Exchequer since being appointed to the role in July 2016. [1]

Contents

201718 taxes and spending

Taxes

Receipts2017-2018 revenues (£ billions). [2]
Income Tax175
Value Added Tax (VAT)143
National Insurance130
Corporate Tax52
Excise duties48
Council Tax32
Business rates30
Other134
Total Government revenue744

Spending

Department2017-2018 Expenditure (£ billions). [3]
Social protection245
Health149
Education102
Defence48
Debt interest46
Housing and Environment36
Transport37
Public order and safety34
Personal social services32
Industry, agriculture and employment23
Other50
Total Government spending802

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References

  1. "Budget 2017: Philip Hammond faces row over tax rises for self-employed - as it happened". The Guardian. 8 March 2017. Retrieved 29 June 2017.
  2. HM Treasury, "Government spending and revenue: Chart 2: Public sector receipts 2016-17", in HM Treasury (ed.), Spring Budget 2017 (PDF), London: HMSO, p. 8, ISBN   9781474140973.
  3. HM Treasury, "Government spending and revenue: Chart 2: Public sector spending 2017-18", in HM Treasury (ed.), Spring Budget 2017 (PDF), London: HMSO, p. 8, ISBN   9781474140973.