Spring Statement
A reminder of the key announcements in March 2023
Key points in the spring budget included the expansion of free childcare hours, ‘returnerships’ for over-50s, and more support for people with disabilities or long-term health conditions.
In his speech, the chancellor unveiled his plans to grow the UK economy through a strategy that focuses on four pillars, or “four E’s”: Education, Enterprise, Employment and Everywhere.
So, what did each pillar of the industrial strategy address?
‘Everywhere’ concentrated on measures to level up growth across the UK.
‘Enterprise’ focused on becoming Europe’s most dynamic economy by lowering business tax, reducing energy costs and supporting growth industries.
‘Employment’ brought forward reforms to remove the barriers that stop people who want to from working.
‘Education’ brought forward reforms to childcare including increasing the availability of childcare, reducing costs and increasing the number of parents able to use it.
Consequently, he announced the government’s phased plan to expand the 30 hours a week of free childcare to include one and two-year-olds.
Working parents of two-year-olds will be able to access 15 hours of free childcare from April 2024.
From September 2024, that 15 hours will be extended to all children from 9 months.
From September 2025 every single working parent of under 5s will have access to 30 hours free childcare per week.
He announced a new voluntary employment scheme called Universal Support for disabled people. As part of this, the government will spend up to £4,000 per person to help them find suitable jobs and put in place the support they need.
Hunt also explained the government want to help individuals who are forced to leave work because of a health condition such as back pain or a mental health issue. In light of this he announced a £400m investment to increase the availability of mental health and musculoskeletal resources and expand placement and support schemes for individuals.
The Annual Allowance (AA) will increase by 50% from £40,000 to £60,000 per year.
The money purchase annual allowance will increase from £4,000 to £10,000 per year.
The tapered annual allowance will be updated.
The lifetime allowance will be completely abolished.
Hunt said: “No one should be pushed out of the workforce for tax reasons,” and these measures are broadly to encourage older workers to stay in the job market and will undoubtedly reduce the temptation to retire early.
Consequently, in an effort to attract “older workers” back into the labour market, Hunt said the Department for Work and Pensions intends to increase the number of over-50s benefitting from mid-life MOTs five-fold, from 8,000 to 40,000 a year.
The Mid-life MOT is a review for workers in their 40s and 50s that helps them take stock of their finances, skills and health, and enables them to better prepare for their retirement and build financial resilience.
He also announced the creation of a new type of apprenticeship for the over 50s: returnerships.
The returnerships are a type of apprenticeship that will be targeted at over 50s who are keen to return to work. Hunt said these measures would focus on “flexibility and previous experience to reduce training length”.
Successful applications will have access to £80 million of support for a range of interventions including skills, infrastructure, tax reliefs and business rates retention. There will be certain employer National Insurance savings within those investment zones.
The CIPP have commented that the Growth Plan of 2022 confirmed eligible employers in investment zones would benefit from a zero rate of employer NI contributions (NICs) on new (eligible) employee earnings up to £50,270 per year.
However, by contrast, the Investment Zone Policy Prospectus, states that eligible employers will pay a zero-rate of employer NICs on any new employee working in the site for at least 60% of their time, on earnings up to £25,000 per year, in line with employer NICs reliefs in Freeports. This relief can be applied for a period of 36 months per employee. We’ll provide clarification as soon as it’s available.
The background to the announcement was that companies and unincorporated associations that pay Corporation Tax will have the charge increased to 25% for the financial year beginning 1 April 2023.
In addition, the super deduction scheme, which granted capital allowances at 130% on qualifying capital expenditure, will expire on 31 March 2023.
From April 2023 until the end of March 2026, companies can claim 100% capital allowances on qualifying plant and machinery investments.
Full expensing allows companies to write off the cost of investment in one go.
Under full expensing, for every pound a company invests, their taxes are cut by up to 25p.
In the budget two major changes were announced:
This means businesses will benefit from:
Full expensing – which offers 100% first-year relief to companies on qualifying new main rate plant and machinery investments from 1 April 2023 until 31 March 2026
The 50% first-year allowance (FYA) for expenditure by companies on new special rate (including long life) assets until 31 March 2026
The Annual Investment Allowance (AIA) providing 100% first-year relief for plant and machinery investments up to £1 million, which is available for all businesses including unincorporated businesses and most partnerships.