Budget 2016: New cash for flood defences and road improvements
George Osborne has unveiled a 鈥渓ow tax enterprise鈥 Budget he believes will protect the UK from a 鈥渄angerous cocktail鈥 of global economic risks.
There was little new in the Budget for construction beyond what had already been trailed in the past few days, but there was new cash for flood defences and road improvements in the North - 拢700m and 拢230m respectively - as well as progress on a number of devolution deals for East Anglia, the West of England, Edinburgh and Swansea.
In the Budget documents released after Osborne had sat down, there was a series of announcements on housing including bringing forward the delivery of 13,000 affordable homes and a consultation on increasing transparency in the property market.
Osborne confirmed 拢300m of funding for transport - including funds for HS3 and Crossrail 2 - as announced yesterday.
He scrapped the carbon reduction commitment - a mandatory emissions reduction scheme for large organisations - claiming it was a 鈥渢ax鈥 that had hit retailers in particular hard.
Osborne also outlined a radical overhaul of England鈥檚 education sector, including a 拢1.5bn plan to convert all state schools into academies by 2022, and a tax on sugary drinks.
Fuel duty was not increased, despite reports in recent days that it could rise for the first time since 2011.
Budget round-up
- Extra 拢700m announced for flood defences
- 拢300m for transport projects - including funds for HS3 and Crossrail 2
- More than 拢230m earmarked for road improvements in the north of England, including upgrades to M62
- The delivery of 13,000 affordable homes two years early by bringing forward 拢250 million of capital spending to 2017-18 and 2018-19
- Starter Homes Land Fund prospectus inviting local authorities to access 拢1.2bn of funding to remediate brownfield land for housing
- Consultation on increasing transparency in the property market
- HCA working with Network Rail on releasing land for housing and commercial schemes
- Legislation to make it easier for local authorities to work together to create garden towns
- East Anglia and the West of England (Bristol and Bath) to get combined authorities
- Osborne has opened negotiations with Edinburgh and Swansea over new City Deals
- New Shakespeare North theatre on the site of the first permanent theatre outside of London
- The carbon reduction commitment - a mandatory emissions reduction scheme for large organisations - has been scrapped
- Stamp duty reform for commercial properties
- Small businesses will be exempt from business rates up to 拢15k in revenue. 600,000 small businesses will pay no rates at all
- Corporation tax to be cut to 17% by 2020
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