What the Budget means for you - video script

John Fitzsimons reviews how the 2010 Budget will impact your bank balance.
John Fitzsimons reviews how the 2010 Budget will impact your bank balance.
John Fitzsimons reviews how the 2010 Budget will impact your bank balance.
The winners
Let’s start with the positives. First-time buyers got a great boost, with the doubling of the Stamp Duty threshold to £250,000. However, it’s really only of benefit to buyers in the South East, South West and London, as in the rest of the UK, the average transaction price of a first-time buyer property is less than the previous threshold of £125,000.
Also celebrating will be those looking to build savings. Banks will be obliged to make current accounts available to all Brits – currently more than a million people are excluded. ISA limits will also increase with inflation, which is great news.
And finally, drivers should be pleased that the planned 3p increase in duty will at least be staggered, with 1p increases in April, October and next January
The losers
It’s not been a good day for those people buying property at the top end of the market. To pay for the first-time buyer tax cut, those buying property for more than £1m will have to stump up a whopping 5% in tax!
The wealthy will also be upset that the Government is clamping down on tax havens like Belize, and freezing inheritance tax thresholds for four years.
And as is by now traditional, drinkers and smokers have been clouted again. Duty on beer, wine and spirits will rise by 2% a year until 2013, though cider drinkers have been particularly punished with a 10% duty rise! Smokers will also face a 1% duty increase, with 2% following in future years.
Of course, if the Tories win the election in the next few weeks there will be another Budget, so we might be going through all this again!
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Comments
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The news about banks having to provide current accounts is good for me. I was a police officer, got injured during an arrest and ended up off work. My salary stopped for 6 months and Halifax bank created an unauthorised overdraft by charging me. They then had the humour to write to me telling me that I had used my account creating an overdraft. I couldn't clear it for three weeks, in the interim they closed the account! For the last 15 years they'd had my salary in that account, but as soon as I was in difficulty, they got rid. Of course that action alone impinges on my 'credit rating'. I hate banks. Can't we just get rid of them?
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26 March 2010