How to watch the Budget 2023: Start time, TV channel and live ...

14 Mar 2023
Budget 2023

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt is set to deliver his Spring Budget on Wednesday 15 March.

The announcement will be the Chancellor’s second fiscal statement since his first announcement in November 2022, which came as a hurried remedy to his predecessor Kwasi Kwarteng’s car-crash mini-budget in September 2022.

You can catch his statement live as it is broadcast across digital platforms and terrestrial TV. Here’s everything you need to know…

What time is the Budget 2023?

The spring Budget is taking place on Wednesday 15 March. The Budget speech will be read out to MPs in the Houses of Parliament after Prime Minister’s Questions, which means it should start at about 12.30pm.

What TV channel is Jeremy Hunt’s Budget announcement on?

The Budget announcement will be shown live on major news channels including BBC News and Sky News, and details will be published on the Treasury’s website.

How to watch the Budget live stream

i will be broadcasting a live stream of Jeremy Hunt’s announcement, alongside live expert coverage of the event, which can be found on the homepage.

What will Jeremy Hunt announce?

The Chancellor is not expected to announce tax cuts, despite a contingent of Tory MPs pushing hard for them.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has said the UK’s economy is likely to perform worst of any G7 nation in 2023, thanks in part to recent fiscal and monetary tightening.

But Treasury insiders insist the warning will not change Mr Hunt’s economic strategy, which involves raising taxes and limiting spending to reduce borrowing costs and bring inflation under control, before a limited giveaway in the spring Budget in 2024.

Chris Etherington, tax partner at the accountancy firm RSM, said: “Tax cuts may yet be announced in the spring Budget, but it seems likely these will be long-term promises that are unlikely to provide any immediate relief for taxpayers.”

Mr Hunt could also reverse a previous promise from Mr Sunak that the basic rate of income tax will fall to 19 per cent in 2024, with HMRC saying this would cost £6.85bn for the 2024-25 financial year.

“The political and economic landscape has clearly shifted since the war of words with Liz Truss on tax cuts in the leadership contest. Based on the figures published by HMRC, it seems even more likely the Chancellor will say this is a measure the country cannot currently afford,” Mr Etherington said.

The Government is expected to extend support for energy bills until the end of June to help households continuing to struggle with the cost of living crisis.

i understands that energy firms have been asked to prepare for the energy price guarantee (EPG), which currently caps bills for the average household at £2,500 a year, to remain at that level for three months after it expires on 1 April, rather than increase to £3,000 as previously planned.

The Chancellor could announce plans relating to his goal of getting more people into the workforce, and could announce higher defence spending, after delaying a decision on defence at the last Budget.

A planned 12p rise in fuel duty – a tax charged on any petrol, diesel and other fuels used in vehicles or for heating – is likely to be suspended and the current relief of 5p per litre is also expected to be extended for another year.

Mr Hunt could announce an increase to the state pension age, although i understands this is unlikely despite much speculation. Currently, the age at which people start receiving their state pension is 66, and is set to rise to 68 between 2044 and 2046. There is speculation this could be brought forward to the mid-2030s.

There is “really significant” pressure on the Chancellor to raise public sector salaries, said Cara Pacitti, senior economist at the Resolution Foundation, as nurses, teachers, civil servants, rail workers and others continue to strike over pay rises that do not match the rate of inflation.

The Government has said it can only afford a 3.5 per cent rise in public sector salaries. Negotiations are likely to continue beyond the Budget.

Budget 2023

This Wednesday marks Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s first full Budget, with a number of changes expected that will affect your money. i takes a look at what we could see in Wednesday’s financial statement.

Liz Truss had a plan for a ‘back-door Singapore-on-Thames’. Rishi Sunak’s government has junked it.

A new post-Brexit regime of alcohol duty, which will see drinks taxed on the basis of how much alcohol they contain, will take effect in August. The exact level of duty to be levied on each drink will be announced at the Budget.

In an interview with i, Paul Johnson of the Institute of Fiscal Studies said the UK is likely to see taxes rise to a record high over the next two years, which will stay high, he believes, for at least 30 years. He also said that plans by Jeremy Hunt to raise the the lifetime tax-free limit on pensions savings will not help boost the workforce.

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