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    Sunak’s Budget to boost low-deposit mortgages for first-time buyers

    First-time buyers with small deposits will get a leg up onto the property ladder with a mortgage guarantee scheme in next week’s Budget.Rishi Sunak plans to incentivise lenders to provide mortages to first-time buyers and current homeowners, with just 5 per cent deposits to buy properties worth up to £600,000.The chancellor will set out on Wednesday how the government will offer lenders the guarantee they require to provide mortgages covering the remaining 95 per cent.The Treasury said low-deposit mortgages have “virtually disappeared” because of the economic impacts of the coronavirus pandemic.The prime minister, Boris Johnson, said: “I want generation rent to become generation buy and these 95 per cent mortgage guarantees help to deliver this promise.”Young people shouldn’t feel excluded from the chance of owning their own home and now it will be easier than ever to get onto the property ladder.”The scheme, which will be subject to the usual affordability checks, will be available to lenders from April.Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayIt is based on the Help to Buy mortgage guarantee scheme introduced in 2013 by David Cameron and George Osborne, that ran until June 2017.Aiming to reinvigorate the market following the 2008 financial crisis, that scheme was said to have helped more than 100,000 households buy a home across the UK.Mr Sunak said: “Owning a home is a dream for millions across the UK and we want to help as many people as possible.“Saving up for a big deposit can often be difficult, and the pandemic has meant there are fewer low deposit mortgages available.”Labour’s shadow housing secretary Thangam Debbonaire said: “Home ownership has fallen in the decade the Conservatives spent weakening the foundations of our economy.“If the chancellor wants to help young people get on, he should deliver a Budget with a relentless focus on jobs and growth.“What young people need to get on is the secure future that comes with a decent job and genuinely affordable new houses to be built for them to make homes of, not going back to the days of sky-high mortgages.”Additional reporting by PA More

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    Rishi Sunak to increase contactless payment limit to £100 in Budget

    The legal limit on contactless payments is to more than double to £100, the chancellor Rishi Sunak will announce in his budget later.Ministers hope the move, designed to make transactions easier, will provide a shot in the arm to the struggling retail industry. But many in the sector, one of the hardest hit by the coronavirus lockdown, are calling on Mr Sunak to unveil a long-term package of support when he stands up at 12.30pm.Non-essential retailers still have to wait weeks before they are officially allowed to re-open under the government’s plans to get the country back to normal by mid-June.Mr Sunak is understood to have told the cabinet this morning that his budget will be about building the UK’s future economy.He also told cabinet colleagues that the UK could be optimistic about the economic recovery. Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayMr Sunak has previously warned the UK faces an economic emergency in the wake of the battle against the global pandemic. At the moment the current legal single payment limit is £45.But that will rise to £100 from today, although it may take a while longer for shoppers to notice the difference on the High Street.Mr Sunak said: “As we begin to open the UK economy and people return to the high street, the contactless limit increase will make it easier than ever before for people to pay for their shopping, providing a welcome boost to retail that will protect jobs and drive growth across the UK.”The popularity of contactless payments is rising, with eight out of ten adults thought to have used the system at least once in 2019.Ministers say the change has been made possible in part by the UK’s exit from the European Union, which currently has a £45 limit.The rise was recommended by the watchdog the Financial Conduct Authority. More

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    Budget 2021: Five things to look out for in Rishi Sunak’s speech

    Chancellors used to be fond of keeping a proverbial rabbit on standby to pull out of a hat on Budget day and grab the headlines. Rishi Sunak’s latest speech has been so heavily trailed that there may be fewer surprises than in previous years, but there is no doubt 2021’s Budget is of huge importance. A rapid rollout of vaccines has brought with it cautious optimism about a return to normality, meaning the announcement will give the best indication so far of this government’s vision for the UK post-pandemic.So what are the big things to look out for? 1. Economy and public financesThe chancellor has repeatedly asserted his wish to tame the public finances by bringing down the gap between what the government spends and what it collects in taxes. This could set the tone for the rest of this parliament.Therefore, the latest figures from the Office for Budget Responsibility, and Sunak’s comments on these figures, will be keenly watched. There is near-universal agreement among experts that boosting the economy remains a far more pressing priority than “balancing the books”, which would risk repeating the mistakes of the austerity years. While the chancellor will no doubt want to paint a positive picture, any recovery remains extremely fragile. Last year the economy shrank by 9.9 per cent, the worst performance since 1709. In this financial year the government is expected to have borrowed somewhere between £350bn and £390bn to cover the gap between tax receipts and total spending. That’s a huge sum but almost all of it has been covered by the Bank of England, which has created new money to buy the government’s debt.The government effectively owes money to itself because the central bank (despite its much-discussed independence) is a branch of the state. It will be interesting to note Sunak’s rhetoric on the public finances, given that servicing the debt at current low interest rates does not require massive tax rises or spending cuts.2. More support for the housing marketThe chancellor is expected to extend a tax break on home purchases for another three months.The stamp duty holiday means no tax on the first £500,000 of the sale price. That means a maximum tax saving of £15,000 on all property sales at £500,000 or more.A new government mortgage guarantee scheme is expected to offer 95 per cent mortgages for houses worth up to £600,000.These measures are controversial as they are expected to push up prices, which have already been motoring along.As predicted, the stamp duty holiday helped fuel a property boom in 2020 despite the economic gloom. The average sold price jumped 8.5 per cent – far in excess of wage growth – to more than £250,000 and the latest figures show that the trend has continued into 2021.The primary beneficiaries are not people looking to buy their first home, but those who already own one. Even more quids in are landlords who own several properties as assets.3. Extension of the furlough scheme The coronavirus job retention scheme is set to continue until the end of September.The extension will be a relief to the millions of workers whose wages are partly supported by the government. The next big question is how the government helps businesses that will struggle when furlough is withdrawn.As part of the proposed answer, Sunak will unveil a £520m “Help to Grow” scheme. It will give smaller firms access to training from top business schools as well as government subsidies of up to £5,000 to pay for software it is hoped will increase productivity.£5bn Restart Grant will give 700,000 shops, pubs, clubs, hotels, restaurants, gyms and hair salons up to £18,000 each to boost their businesses.Watch this space for additional measures to help businesses out of the current slump.4. Tax risesSunak has prepared the ground for tax hikes, saying he needs to “level with” the public about the task at hand.The Conservatives’ 2019 manifesto promised not to raise the rates of income tax, national insurance or VAT. To stick to this pledge, Sunak is reported to be considering a freeze in the thresholds at which people start paying income tax or move into higher brackets. That would mean more people pay higher rates as average wages rise.Capital gains tax is also rumoured to be in line for an increase. Currently, the rising value of company shares, property or other assets is taxed at a much lower rate than income. This favours relatively well-off people.The UK’s corporation tax rate may be increased from 19 per cent to 25 per cent, which would still make it among the lowest of the G7 countries and lower than the EU average. A modest rise in corporation tax carries little risk of choking off the economic recovery as it only affects those firms that are making a profit.5. Business rates cut?Business rates – the tax on commercial property values – have been heavily criticised for being unfair and out of date. An extension of the holiday on rates for retail, hospitality and leisure businesses would be widely welcomed. Without an extension beyond the current 31 March end date, struggling businesses face big bills just as they are trying to get back on their feet. An overhaul of the system is long overdue but may have to wait. More

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    Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s detention ‘blot on British diplomacy’, says husband ahead of scheduled release

    The five-year-long detainment of a British mother in Iran is a “blot on British diplomacy”, her husband has said.Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who is a British-Iranian dual national, has been detained in Tehran since 2016 when she was sentenced to five years in prison over allegations, which she denies, of plotting to overthrow the Iranian government.That sentence is scheduled to end this weekend.Her husband Richard has said he has spent the last five years “swinging between hope and despair” as his wife remained in Iran.He told the PA news agency: “It is shocking that what started off as a mum and a baby on holiday could be allowed to last for five years.”There’s no ambiguity in that, that’s just staggering. It is a blot on British diplomacy and clearly Iranian hostage-taking is outrageous.”Ms Zaghari-Ratcliffe, 42, has been out of prison since last spring due to the coronavirus crisis, but has been under house arrest at her parents’ home in Tehran.Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayPrior to her arrest, Ms Zaghari-Ratcliffe lived in London with her husband and worked as a project manager for the charity Thomson Reuters Foundation.She was arrested at Tehran’s Imam Khomeini airport while travelling with her young daughter, Gabriella, to celebrate the country’s new year and to visit her parents in 2016.Ms Zaghari-Ratcliffe was held in solitary confinement in an unknown location in Kerman Province, 1,000km south of Tehran.Gabriella is now of school age and is “counting down” the days until her mother comes home, her father said. Mr Ratcliffe said: “She’s got a calendar that she crosses off each day.”She’s in that sense counting down and I think probably still at this point treating it like an advent calendar, so the days will come off and then the magic delivery will happen.”In terms of her wider understanding, for a long time she’s been asking, ‘When’s mummy coming back, when’s mummy coming back’.”Hopefully this won’t be tough for her psychologically if mummy doesn’t come back at the end of all those days on the calendar.”She’s had a lot of experience of grown-ups promising her that mummy’s coming home and then mummy not coming home.”Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s original sentence is due to end on 7 March, but she appeared in court last November on charges of spreading propaganda against the regime.Speaking at the time, Mr Ratcliffe called the charges “spurious”, saying the case presented the same evidence used when she was convicted in 2016.
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    Budget: Rishi Sunak signals tax hikes necessary amid ‘extraordinary’ borrowing levels

    Chancellor Rishi Sunak has sent a clear signal of tax hikes in today’s Budget, telling the cabinet that it would not be “right or responsible” for the government to ignore the fact that borrowing is at “extraordinary” levels.Setting out his Budget plans to cabient colleagues shortly before addressing MPs in the House of Commons, Mr Sunak said he would use the package to provide support to help ‘get people through to the other other side of the crisis”.But he warned that borrowing had risen to levels previously seen only in wartime and the government must be “honest” about the belt-tightening that would be needed to rein in debt.A Downing Street spokesman said: “He said that the coronavirus pandemic has hit our economy hard. We’ve stepped in to provide support and protect jobs and today we will outline more support to get people through to the other side of the crisis. “The chancellor said we must be honest with ourselves and the country about what that has meant. We are borrowing on an extraordinary scale – equivalent only to wartime levels. “He said that, as a Conservative government, we know that we cannot ignore this problem and it wouldn’t be right or responsible to do so.”The spokesman added: “The chancellor said that, while we face challenging times, we will rise to that challenge and we can be optimistic about the recovery. He said the Budget will begin the work of building our future economy.”Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayBoris Johnson told the cabinet that the government would set out a plan for growth, focusing on innovation, skills and infrastructure, to “unleash the potential” of the country following the pandemic.“He said the Budget would begin to set out how the country will make the most of our post-Brexit future and as a science superpower,” said the No 10 spokesman. More

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    Under-fire Scottish leader defends handling of sex claims

    Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon strongly denied being part of a plot against her predecessor, as she testified under oath Wednesday in a political saga that is tearing apart her party and imperiling her position as Scotland’s leader Sturgeon defended the way her government handled sexual assault claims against former First Minister Alex Salmond saying the #MeToo movement had made it clear that sexual abuse allegations about powerful people must not be “ignored or swept under the carpet.”Sturgeon was giving her side of the story to a committee of lawmakers investigating a political and personal feud that is wracking Scotland’s pro-independence movement and the governing Scottish National Party. Its antagonists are Salmond and Sturgeon, two former allies and friends who have dominated Scottish politics for decades.Salmond was tried and acquitted last year on sexual assault charges, and claims the misconduct allegations brought by several women were part of a conspiracy to wreck his political career.He accuses Sturgeon of lying about when she learned of the allegations and breaking the code of conduct for government ministers. He alleges her government undermined democratic principles and the rule of law by allowing the distinctions between government, party and civil service to become blurred, and claims it acted wrongly in contesting a legal challenge from him despite knowing it would likely lose.Scotland’s highest civil court ruled in 2019 that the way the Scottish government had handled the misconduct allegations was unlawful, and awarded Salmond 500,000 pounds ($695,000) in expenses.Sturgeon told a Scottish Parliament inquiry into the way sexual misconduct complaints were handled that the government had made mistakes. But she insisted no one had “acted with malice or as part of a plot against Alex Salmond.”Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekday“A number of women made serious complaints about Alex Salmond’s behavior,” she said. “The government, despite the mistakes it undoubtedly made, tried to do the right thing. As first minister I refused to follow the age-old pattern of allowing a powerful man to use his status and connections to get what he wants.”Salmond, who led the SNP for two decades and was Scotland’s first minister between 2007 and 2014, built the separatist party into a major political force and took the country to the brink of independence by holding a 2014 referendum.He stepped down as first minister after the “remain” side won, and Sturgeon, his friend and deputy, replaced him. In 2019, Salmond was charged with sexual assault and attempted rape after allegations by nine women who had worked with him as first minister or for the party. Salmond called the charges “deliberate fabrications for a political purpose,” and was acquitted after a trial in March 2020.Salmond has called the experience of the last few years a “nightmare.” Sturgeon expressed sympathy for her former friend, but said she had searched in vain during his testimony last week “for any sign, any sign at all, that he recognized how difficult this has been for others too.”“That he was acquitted by a jury of criminal conduct is beyond question,” she said. “But I know just from what he told me, that his behavior was not always appropriate. And yet across six hours of testimony, there was not a single word of regret, reflection or even simple acknowledgement of that.”The political soap opera in Edinburgh could have major implications for the future of Scotland and the U.K.Scottish voters rejected independence in the 2014 referendum, which was billed at the time as a once-in-a-generation decision. But the SNP says Brexit has fundamentally changed the situation by dragging Scotland out of the European Union even though a majority of Scottish voters in the U.K.’s 2016 EU membership referendum opted to remain in the EU. The U.K. as a whole voted narrowly to leave the bloc and finalized the break on Jan. 1.An election for the Scottish Parliament is due in May, and the SNP has a strong lead in opinion polls. Sturgeon says if she wins a majority, she will push for a new independence referendum for Scotland and challenge British Prime Minister Boris Johnson in the courts if his government refuses to agree. More

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    When does the furlough scheme end?

    The furlough scheme has supported millions of jobs, paying up to 80 per cent of wages for workers whose jobs have been impacted by the pandemic.After being extended multiple times, the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme – to give it its official title – was set to end on 30 April.However, after some not-so-subtle hints that another extension may be on the way, the government confirmed it will now end on 30 September.Employees will continue to receive 80 per cent of their salary for hours not worked, but unions and industry warned that the chancellor is risking jobs by requiring employers to contribute 10 per cent towards pay in July and 20 per cent in August and September while the state covers the rest.The additional contributions will coincide with the planned lifting of lockdown restrictions which it is hoped will also bring increased revenues for businesses. All dates for easing are subject to change and are dependent on progress with bringing the virus under control. The extra financial burden will give employers difficult decisions to make about whether to keep on staff. Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayMeanwhile, more than 600,000 self-employed people excluded so far from the government’s support package will be able to claim direct cash grants, as the government’s self-employment income support scheme (SEISS) is extended to cover those who began working for themselves in 2019-20.Furloughed staff can continue to work part-time with their employer paying only for the hours they are needed.Employers pay National Insurance and pension contributions for all of the furloughed staff member’s hours, including those not worked. Mr Sunak will tell MPs: “First, we will continue doing whatever it takes to support the British people and businesses through this moment of crisis.“Second, once we are on the way to recovery, we will need to begin fixing the public finances – and I want to be honest today about our plans to do that.”Labour said Mr Sunak could have made today’s announcement long ago, but had denied businesses certainty for months in order to be able to grab the limelight on Budget day, just eight weeks before furlough was due to expire at the end of April. The latest extension came after the chancellor dropped a clue in an interview on Sunday. Asked about the scheme by Sky News’s Sophy Ridge, Mr Sunak said he would do “whatever it takes” to support workers.“I’m not going to comment on specific policies but I want to make sure people realise that we are going to be there to support them and if you look at our track record we went big, we went early and there’s more to come next week,” he said.Kwasi Kwarteng, the business secretary, went further on Tuesday, appearing to confirm that the furlough scheme will be extended.”I think the Chancellor has already indicated that we will be extending furlough,” he said.”I think that has been part of a public announcement. I think there will be other measures that we will see tomorrow.”He told BBC Radio 4’s Today it was a “fairly good assumption that while lockdown persists there will be additional support”.Abruptly ending the furlough scheme, which has been the central plank of the government’s economic response to Covid, while restrictions are still in place, would have risked causing a sharp rise in unemployment.Official figures show the number of furloughed workers rose by 700,000 to 4.7 million in January during the third lockdown.However, experts have also warned that keeping a blanket measure in place which protects some jobs that may not have a future is damaging for the economy in long term.Mr Sunak will lay out details of the government’s latest job support plans in the Budget at 12:30 on Wednesday. More

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    My advice to Rishi Sunak ahead of the Budget

    Tomorrow’s Budget will owe a lot to a fifth-century north African saint who is reported to have asked the Almighty: “God, make me good, but not just yet.”The chancellor says he wants to “level with the British people”. In words, maybe. But in deeds, not just yet. Instead, he will try to ensure that there is post-Covid economic recovery by continuing to “do what it takes” to support loss-making businesses and jobs, and to stimulate consumer demand through the remaining months of an unwinding lockdown.Rishi Sunak will do this by running a budget deficit in 2020-21 of around £350bn, close to 17 per cent of GDP, a level of deficit financing unheard of outside wartime and adding to the stock of public debt, already around 100 per cent of GDP.Because an omniscient God is also economically literate, He (or She) will understand that these war-time levels of borrowing are necessary – for a while. But He (or She) will also need reassuring, through the high priests of public finance on the Conservative backbenches, that “good”, in the form of balanced budgets and debt reduction, will return.To demonstrate good intentions, there will be some tax increases, not so searing as to choke off recovery but sufficient to demonstrate that the chancellor hasn’t become a high spending apostate. The tax increases will also need to signal that even such protected species as Conservative voters and donors will have to pay their share.Since the pandemic has forced businesses to close, creating an estimated 2.5 million unemployed (7 per cent of the labour force) and perhaps more, it is right that companies and workers are compensated. as they have been through business loans and furlough payments.But another key fact about the pandemic is that household savings, normally around 7 to 8 per cent of disposable household income, have surged to around 25 per cent. The public is very nervous about the future and, anyway, non-essential shops are shut. If the government did nothing more to offset the rise in private savings than merely lifting the lockdown restrictions, there is still a risk that it leaves a big hoard of savings and a shortage of spending, creating mass unemployment.The Budget deficit represents the state spending vigorously where consumers and businesses have been unable to spend. It now has to be gradually reduced as households get back to spending normally.One of the chancellor’s problems is that he doesn’t know how fast people will start splashing out: like a “coiled spring”, as Andy Haldane of the Bank of England predicts, or like a wet blanket if people are still frightened for their health or for their long-term financial position. Certainly, the spending limits for poor and indebted families could cancel out the coiled springs.The recovery, when it happens, will generate more revenue from increased spending and economic activity. But perhaps not enough to return to budgetary balance, especially as some lucrative tax generators like the City of London have been damaged by Brexit. So, other taxes are needed in due course.There are two quite different budget calculations, often confused in the public debate. The first is how quickly to get the “day-to-day” budget back into rough balance (excluding the £50 to £60bn of capital borrowing for investment, mainly in infrastructure, which almost everyone agrees is imperative).The second is when and how much to “pay back” government debt that has been accumulated in the pandemic. In fact, there is no reason to worry about this legacy debt. There is almost complete unanimity among economic policymakers, including the IMF and the OECD, that there is absolutely no reason to start “paying back” at this stage. Get the economy back to healthy growth and full employment, so that further debt no longer needs to be incurred. Then start worrying about the legacy.Astute readers will recognise that this is a very different argument from that advanced by the coalition government 10 years ago. Back then, debt was lower than today, but we were determined to get it down. There are several big differences between then and now, the most important being interest rates. Debt is more or less of a problem depending on how much it costs to service.In May 2010, the interest rate on government debt (10 year bonds) was 3.7 per cent and there were also real worries that they could rise much higher if markets panicked, as they seemed likely to do, since Britain was exceptionally exposed to the banking crisis. Today, interest rates are close to zero (0.7 per cent) and Britain is, thanks to the vaccine roll-out, better positioned to recover quicker than most countries.Still, the chancellor cannot ignore the level of public debt entirely, even though it is currently well under half the level Britain had emerging from the war or which Japan has today. Interest rates, and servicing costs, could rise in future. There was a shiver of fear about future inflation, and higher rates, in global bond markets last week: perhaps a premonition. Then, there is also the risk of some future disaster – a new pandemic; a financial crisis followed by recession – which could lead to another borrowing binge.It is these anxieties that will be used to justify a premature and misdirected “Austerity Mark 2”, which is already well underway. The government has cut the aid budget – in my view wrongly – so that Britain is withdrawing support from Yemen as it faces one of the worst famines in modern times. At home, it is planning – also wrongly – to reverse the £20 supplement to universal credit, badly needed by poor families. And the government has frozen public sector pay, which could lead to a confrontation with teachers, nurses and police officers later in the year.Tax rises are already in train, too. There are big increases in council tax planned to keep councils from bankruptcy and basic services from being slashed further. We undoubtedly need a property tax, not just for revenue but to help dampen the rampant and socially damaging escalation in property prices. However, council tax neither funds councils adequately nor taxes people fairly. It badly needs reform with higher bands and rates of tax that better reflect the value of property. Otherwise, it is just another tax on the less well off.The chancellor has also trailed the idea of not raising income tax and NI thresholds: potentially undoing the good work of the Coalition in lifting the lowest earners out of tax.Another tax rise baked in is the promised crackdown on freelancers through IR35. The aim is to widen the net of national insurance. Unfortunately, in order to catch a few serious tax dodgers, large numbers of self-employed contractors will be hit: people who have been among the biggest economic casualties of the pandemic.So far, so bad. The chancellor should instead be imposing NI on better off, working, pensioners (like me) who have been shielded from economic sacrifices during 2020. It would be reassuring, too, if there was a move to equalise income and capital gains tax; if corporation tax were closer to the OECD average; if digital businesses were to be properly taxed; and if carbon emissions were taxed effectively. None of these should inhibit business recovery if the increases are moderate. And they would convey a serious commitment to a fairer tax system.The obsession of Conservative backbenchers with tax cuts regardless of circumstances is economic nonsense. Labour’s sudden conversion to stopping all tax rises, while demanding more spending, is equally unconvincing and wrong.While the recovery is uncertain and interest rates low, it would be foolish to rush the process of deficit reduction. And the legacy debt from the pandemic can be ignored for the time being.But even St Augustine accepted that respite from uncomfortable truths is only temporary. In the end, decent services have to be funded by fair taxes. More