Budget
2008
BUDGET SUMMARY INTRODUCTION
Difficult
economic conditions and a raft of earlier
announcements meant that Alistair Darling’s
debut Budget contained few surprises. In the
2007 Budget, Gordon Brown had already trailed
the main changes to income tax and corporation
tax. Similarly, Mr Darling’s Pre-Budget
Report of last October heralded revision of
inheritance tax and, more controversially,
reform of capital gains tax and the treatment
of non-domiciliaries.
The
largest single tax-raising measure that was
newly announced on Budget Day was the increase
in alcoholic duties of 6% above inflation.
There was the usual range of anti-avoidance
legislation, attacking everything from stamp
duty land tax schemes to those involving corporate
intangible assets. However, the Chancellor
chose to delay the rules targeting ‘income
splitting’ until next year’s Finance
Bill, even though draft legislation has already
been issued.
This
was never going to be an exciting Budget,
but that does not make it uneventful: HMRC
issued no fewer than 107 Budget Notes detailing
changes. Simplification of the tax system,
which Mr Darling has said he wants to see,
remains a distant goal:
Budget highlights