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Is it not the next fiscal year +1?
VAT now to be applied to the rental of hairdressers' chairs.
FFS, scandalous.
Anyway, so where's the double dip recession that Labour and the Lib Dems were adamant would happen?
Not sure where you have been the last few months, but are currently living in it in the UK.
Yes changes [b]from [/b]April 2013. TBH, not sure how these things work ie, how quickly these changes can be introduced. Seems clear that couldn't affect current FY 2011/12. But 2012/13?
MSP - that's one of those basic questions that seems difficult to find an answer. Hopefully someone better informed will help soon!
VAT now to be applied to the rental of hairdressers' chairs.
Will this include Hora's car?
the 'Sheriff of Nottingham budget' as it's being referred to in some circles..
At least the proposals for reducing child benefit entitlement are a bit more reasonable (though I doubt TJ would agree).
VAT changes to chairlifts too - might make Fort William uplift more expensive?
Yunki - there are always winners and losers but overall a neutral budget as foreshadowed.
OBR:
The โtakeawaysโ and โgiveawaysโ in the March 2012 Budget broadly balance out over the five years of our latest forecast, leaving the Government on course to meet its two fiscal targets with much the same margin for error as in November.
Farmer_John - Member
Anyway, so where's the double dip recession that Labour and the Lib Dems were adamant would happen?
[url= http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/news/article-1616085/Economy-watch-Is-Britain-heading-recession.html ]So will it be a double-dip?
Opinion is divided: the ITEM club says we're in recession; the NIESR says we've narrowly avoided it (that's a turnaround from two months ago when it estimated a 70 per cent risk of a double-dip recession); the British Chamber of Commerce also expects the UK to avoid recession but forecasts paltry growth of 0.6 per cent in 2012 (5 March).
The OECD has also predicted recession for the first-half of the year (28 November). Standard Chartered (12 December), which has made the most accurate forecasts on the economy in the past two years, warned Britain was already in a recession that would last until the middle of next year.[/url]
The chancellor said the 50p rate was uncompetitive, raised "next to nothing" and would fall to 45p next year.
Why not drop it back to 40p then if it's nothing more than decorative?
Wouldn't an "all in this together" budget mean scrapping of all tax and personal allowances, and a flat rate tax on all earnings either by an individual or a company?
The โtakeawaysโ and โgiveawaysโ in the March 2012 Budget broadly balance out over the five years of our latest forecast, leaving the Government on course to meet its two fiscal targets with much the same margin for error as in November.
Thats "neutral" in the Governments future budgeting forecasts, not in its relative impact on different sectors of society.
"Wouldn't an "all in this together" budget mean scrapping of all tax and personal allowances, and a flat rate tax on all earnings either by an individual or a company? "
Yes, but then the 2/3 of households who currently receive more in benefits than they pay in tax would have to pay more.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-15843746
True MSP - as I said there are always winners and losers and the next few hours of news bulletin researchers will be frantically searching for representatives of both for the rent-a-quotes
Well, on the plus side there's tax breaks for the UK game and animation industries, hopefully this means we can now compete against Canada and France.
I wonder if Activision and Disney would have still shut down their UK studios last year if the tax breaks had been in place when originally planned. :/