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Osborne spells out new, post-election spending cuts

Published: 08 Jul 2015 - 05:35 pm | Last Updated: 14 Jan 2022 - 01:42 am

Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, holds up his budget case for the cameras as he stands outside number 11 Downing Street, before delivering his budget to the House of Commons, in London, on July 8, 2015.

LONDON: Chancellor George Osborne, fresh from a decisive election victory, pledged to recast the country's economy by chopping welfare spending, lowering the tax bill for workers and tackling low productivity that could undermine the recovery.

In the first solely Conservative budget for nearly 20 years, Osborne used the turmoil inGreece to argue that the world's fifth-largest economy needed less spending and less borrowing.

"Britain still spends too much, borrows too much," Osborne told parliament.

"You only have to look at the crisis unfolding in Greece as I speak, to realise that if a country’s not in control of its borrowing, the borrowing takes control of the country," he said.

The budget offers Osborne an opportunity to boost his chances of becoming Britain's next prime minister if David Cameron steps down before the next election in 2020 as he has said he will.

In steps that drew cheers from Conservative lawmakers and a smile from Cameron, Osborne raised the amount of earnings that are exempt from income tax to 11,000 pounds from next year and the inheritance tax threshold on family homes to the 1 million pound mark.

He also pledged to cut corporation tax to 19 percent in 2017 and 18 percent by 2020 from 20 percent currently.

Osborne said the economy was forecast to grow 2.4 percent this year, down from an earlier forecast of 2.5 percent, and 2.3 percent next year, unchanged from an earlier forecast, a rate he said was faster than other major industrialised countries.

Britain's budget deficit of nearly 5 percent of economic output in the 12 months to March is one of the biggest among rich economies.

Osborne pushed the target of achieving a budget surplus into the 2019/20 financial year from the 2018/19 financial year as projected under his previous budget plan.

Osborne, who has previously said he wants to tackle Britain's hefty bill for tax rebates to low-paid workers, said he would freeze working-age benefits for four years.

"The benefits system should not support lifestyles and rents that are not available to the taxpayers who pay for that system," he said.

Osborne is hoping that a recovery in earnings from the effects of the financial crisis will continue in the coming years, helping to offset the loss to incomes from tighter welfare spending.

Turning his focus to the wealthy, Osborne said Britain would abolish the permanent non-domiciled tax status which many rich foreigners had used to reduce their UK tax bill.

The share price of firms associated with the housing market - such as property website Zoopla and house builders Crest Nicholson, Foxtons and Berkeley - fell after the non-dom tax change.

Osborne also pledged to gradually reduce the bank levy rate, though he said he would introduce a new 8 percent surcharge on bank profits.

Reuters