Previous Page  4 / 40 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 4 / 40 Next Page
Page Background

In 2017/18, UK government revenue is forecast

to be £744 billion while government spending is

forecast to be £802 billion

1

. That ‘budget deficit’

is funded by new borrowing.

Similarly, every year – or in recent times, twice

each year – the chancellor of the exchequer

stands at the government despatch box in the

House of Commons to deliver his Budget

address and set out his economic course for the

next year and beyond. Typically, this will begin

with an upbeat assessment of the UK’s past,

present and predicted future economic

performance. Then, in the theatrical part that

follows, a series of tax changes is announced

which usually amounts to a billion (or less)

here and a billion there. You do not need

a degree in mathematics to work out that the

sum total of the address, delivered with such

fanfare, rarely adds up to a hill of beans in the

context of the overall economic picture. This

year was no exception.

The importance of a Budget comes not from

tinkering with the overall tax burden, but rather

from the tone it sets. This is partly because

seasoned observers feel they can tell from

the chancellor’s demeanour and body language

where he sits in the spectrum from genuinely

excited to seriously concerned about the

country’s economic prospects. An apparently

confident chancellor can have a positive effect

on business sentiment.

Philosophy is important, too. The Budget

speech is one of those few set piece

parliamentary occasions when politicians know

that a fair slice of the country and the media will

be listening and have the chance to turn words

into deeds, reminding their voters why it was

they elected them.

This, along with claims of breach of a manifesto

pledge, is why Chancellor Philip Hammond was

criticised so scathingly the morning after he had

delivered the Budget, once his content was

analysed. He had looked good in the first half,

proclaiming the continuation of growth despite the

manifest uncertainties surrounding Brexit. But he

ran into big trouble with his plan to increase tax on

the key business constituency of the self-employed

via higher Class 4 National Insurance contributions

(NICs). He compounded that error by slashing the

ceiling for tax-free dividends from £5,000 to

£2,000. The NICs step was unlikely to be popular

and, since it would not even have raised much

money, largely pointless too. Above all, it was not

what people expected from a Tory chancellor. And,

in the words of the Scottish Nationalists’ Angus

Robertson, an ‘embarrassing, screeching U-turn’

was swiftly forced on the government. The dramatic

episode does serve to underline how the UK’s tax

base is being eroded by the shift to self-employment

and how little scope the chancellor has to raise

taxes thanks to the manifesto commitments of

David Cameron’s government.

For the small investor, however, the absence of

changes to the Capital Gains Tax and estate duty

regimes was just as important. Putting the Budget

behind us, trends to watch in the next few

months are the path of sterling and the

resurgence of inflation. Will Brexit impact on

market volatility or lead to economic slowdown?

How will the elections in France, Germany and

other key European Union countries unfold over

the rest of the year? Looking further afield, what

impact will US President Donald Trump have on

markets, and how will they react to higher US

interest rates? Those issues are well beyond the

ability of a UK chancellor of any stripe to control.

04

|

THE INVESTOR

St. James’s Place has recently launched an estate administration service with our preferred provider

of estate administration, Kings Court Trust. They are one of the leading specialist providers in the UK

who, like us, place their clients at the very heart of everything they do. In their own words, Kings

Court Trust only do one thing – estate administration – and they’re proud to say they do it really

well. Kings Court Trust will be able to help clients lessen the stress of dealing with probate at a

difficult time, while also ensuring the best possible outcome for beneficiaries.

Kings Court Trust will assign a personal estate manager who can be contacted throughout the

process and who will take responsibility for notifying beneficiaries, transferring utility bills, dealing

with Income Tax queries, calculating and paying Inheritance Tax and advising on the distribution of assets.

news

Getty Images. Source: 1 parliament.uk, March 2017

ESTATE ADMINISTRATION SERVICE

ASK THE EXPERTS

ECONOMY

VIEW OF THE DESPATCH BOX

The importance of

a Budget comes not from

tinkeringwith the overall

tax burden, but rather

from the tone it sets