Farming News - Three things to watch out for in Rishi Sunak’s Spring Statement

Three things to watch out for in Rishi Sunak’s Spring Statement

Sean McCann, Chartered Financial Planner at leading rural insurer NFU Mutual, picks out three things to watch out for in Rishi Sunak's Spring Statement next Wednesday. (March 23)

  1. Delaying the planned rise in National Insurance

Sean said: “Since Rishi Sunak announced the 1.25 percentage point hike in National Insurance last Autumn the cost of living crisis has started to bite with inflation beginning to impact most aspects of daily life.

“There is now growing pressure on the Chancellor to delay an increase which will leave the vast majority of workers with less money in their pocket at a time of skyrocketing energy bills.

“Delaying the rise by at least 12 months would also be welcomed by business owners, who face the prospect of paying more National Insurance at a time of rising costs in other areas like fuel and materials.

“If the hike does go ahead, employees and businesses can reduce the impact by paying more into their pensions using salary sacrifice.”

  1. Reducing fuel duty

Sean said: “Fuel prices have hit record highs in recent weeks and we are all paying significantly more to fill up.

“Fuel duty has been frozen for many years, and currently stands at 57.95p per litre, so there is scope to reduce it in order to ease the pain on already stretched budgets.

“The price of domestic heating oil, which is used primarily in rural areas and is taxed at 10.7p per litre, has more than doubled in some areas in recent weeks.”

  1. Increasing tax allowances

Personal Allowance

Sean said: “The Chancellor’s preferred method of raising money is through fiscal drag, which has led to him freezing a number of key tax allowances until 2026. The main one is the Personal Income tax Allowance, which governs the amount of income you can receive before paying tax and currently stands at £12,570.

“Increasing it in line with inflation, which is currently at 5.5% according to the Bank of England, would move it up to £13,261 but even moving it up to £13,000 would help put a little more money into the pockets of millions of people.

“However, the decision to freeze current allowance and Income Tax bands is expected to raise the government an additional £19.2bn by 2026.”

Child Benefit Tax

“In order to help the squeezed middle, the Chancellor should increase the point that the High Income Child Benefit Tax charge starts to impact families. Currently, if one member of the household has income of over £50,000 they become liable for the tax charge, a threshold that hasn’t changed since the tax was introduced in 2013.

“As wages increase more and more families are being caught in the net, and more than a million are now affected. Increasing the threshold is long overdue, and will help families hit by rising energy and fuel prices.”