1994 United Kingdom budget explained

United Kingdom budget
Year:1994
Country:United Kingdom
Previous Budget:November 1993 United Kingdom budget
Previous Year:November 1993
Next Budget:1995 United Kingdom budget
Next Year:1995
Presented:29 November 1994
Parliament:51st
Party:Conservative Party
Chancellor:Kenneth Clarke

The 1994 United Kingdom budget (officially titled A Budget for Jobs)[1] was delivered by Kenneth Clarke, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the House of Commons on 29 November 1994.[2] It was the second budget to be presented by Clarke since his appointment as chancellor the previous year, and its central focus was a planned £24bn worth of tax cuts. Clarke also renewed his commitment to increasing Value Added Tax (VAT) on fuel, but pledged to soften the impact this would have on pensioners. The statement took place shortly after the Party Whip had been withdrawn from eight Conservative backbenchers, leaving the government without a working majority, and amid questions about the future of John Major's leadership of the party. In response to the budget, Tony Blair, leader of the Labour Party, said it would be remembered as the "VAT on fuel budget".

VAT on fuel was due to be raised from 8% to 17.5% in April 1995, but after the government subsequently lost a vote on the legislation to implement the increase, the 1994 budget was followed in December of that year by an emergency financial statement in which Clarke was forced to announce measures to plug the shortfall this would create. He cancelled the majority of the social security help for pensioners that had been outlined in his budget, and raised excise duty on tobacco and alcohol. Clarke's successor as Chancellor, Gordon Brown, reduced VAT on domestic fuel to 5% after Labour won the 1997 general election.

Background

The 1994 budget took place at a difficult time for the Conservative Party, which had removed the Party Whip from eight of its backbench MPs who, during the previous week, had voted against legislation to increase subsidies to the European Union. This meant the party had no overall majority in the House of Commons at the time of the budget. The Conservative Government had also introduced Value Added Tax (VAT) on domestic fuel the previous year, which was unpopular with the public. VAT on fuel of 8% had come into force in April 1994, and was scheduled to increase to 17.5% from April 1995.[3] [4]

Overview

Titled A Budget for Jobs, Clarke described his 1994 statement as having three main priorities: To keep the economy on track to sustain growth, to use the recovery to create more jobs, and to strengthen the economy in the longer term.[5] At its centre was a £24bn programme of tax cuts which was to be achieved over three years, and would be the biggest programme of tax cuts since 1984.[3]

Following the recession of the early 1990s, economic recovery had been under way "at a modest pace" for two and a half years, and was providing the UK with the strongest recovery in Europe. Clarke expected economic growth to be at 4% for 1994–95, and 3% for 1995–96. Inflation was described as being well below the European average, and at its lowest since the 1960s. It was expected to be 2% in 1995. Government plans were announced to set interest rates to keep inflation between 1% and 4%. UK exports were expected to grow by 8% during 1994–95, while investment in plant and machinery would grow by 12%. Consumer demand was much lower, and was forecast to grow by 2–3% over the year. Clarke reported that UK unemployment had fallen by 450,000 since December 1992, with the UK the only country in Europe where unemployment had fallen.[5]

During 1993–94 the government had reduced its planned public expenditure by more than had been forecast, and it was now predicted to be £15bn lower over a three-year period than originally estimated. Expenditure would be reduced by £28bn over 1994–95. The Balance of Payment was expected to be reduced by £6bn for 1994–95, while the public sector borrowing requirement (PSBR) had fallen from £45bn in 1993–94 to £34bn in 1994–95. Going forward, Clarke had reduced previously forecast amounts the government had expected to borrow from £30bn to £21bn in 1995–96, from £21bn to £13bn in 1996–97, and from £12bn to £5bn in 1997–98. Borrowing was also forecast to be equal to government net capital expenditure by 1996–97, with plans to eliminate government borrowing by the end of the decade.[5]

The private finance initiative (PFI) was growing rapidly, with the £370m invested in public transport and £100m of private investment in the National Health Service both cited as examples, with more PFI investment to follow. A third of finance for universities was also coming from the private sector by November 1994. It was forecast that £5bn of capital investment from PFI contracts would be announced during 1995, with the first four private finance transport schemes to shortly go out for tender.[5] Savings in the cost of central government were also forecast, and was expected to be reduced by 10% over the four years to 1997–98, while the number of civil servants would fall to below 500,000 over the same period, their lowest since World War II. Local authority cost were also undergoing reduction, and would be 2.2% in 1995–96.[5]

The chancellor made no major changes to taxation. The lower, middle and upper tax bands remained at their pre-budget levels, although Clarke did increase the 20p rate to £3,200, declaring the "one in five of all taxpayers will now only pay tax at the lowest rate". A full National Insurance rebate of up to twelve months was announced for employers taking on a new employee who had been unemployed for two years or longer, effective from April 1996, lower rate National Insurance contributions would fall by 0.6%, cutting the cost of providing lower paid jobs by £230m in 1995–96. After renewing his commitment to increasing VAT on fuel from 8% to 15%, he acknowledged this would cause difficulty for some and announced a package of help worth £10bn for pensioners, which would include grants for insulating homes and an increase in cold weather payments. The budget included no plans for an increase in duty on alcohol, largely due to the effect the Channel Tunnel was having on the UK drinks industry, but an increase was announced for tobacco, with an increase of 10p on a packet of 20 cigarettes.[1] [3]

Key points

Reaction

In his response to the statement, Tony Blair, leader of the Labour Party and leader of the Opposition, said the budget would become known as the "VAT on fuel budget", and, with reference a planned reduction in mortgage relief to 15% and a reduction in the married couples' tax allowance from April 1995, raised the issue of "other tax rises" that he claimed had not been mentioned in the budget.[3]

The City of London dismissed the budget as a "jam tomorrow" budget.[3]

Emergency financial statement

Clarke argued the revenue that would be raised from increasing VAT on fuel was needed in order for his budget to be implemented and that he would have to cut public spending without it, but many of his party's own MPs feared introducing it could cost the Conservatives votes at the next general election. The legislation to increase VAT on fuel from 8% to 17.5% had its second reading before the House of Commons on 6 December 1994, and was defeated 319–311 in the subsequent vote. In addition to opposition MPs, 15 Conservatives (including the eight suspended MPs) also voted against the proposals, as well as the pro-Conservative Ulster Unionists. Responding to the vote, Clarke told the House, "It is only right that we should listen to the views expressed here. I have therefore decided not to proceed with the second stage of VAT". On 7 December, Jonathan Aitken, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, confirmed there would be "further reductions in public spending and a raising of taxes in other areas".[4]

Faced with a financial shortfall as a result of the money that would not now be raised from the increase, Clarke made an emergency financial statement to the House in which he outlined measures to plug the gap. This included cancelling some of the proposed £10bn help for pensioners, as well as raising excise duty, with 6p on a packet of 20 cigarettes and 4% on alcohol.[3]

Legacy

In October 1995, the Labour Party announced they would reduce the amount of VAT on domestic fuel from 8% to 5% if they were to form the next government, and the pledge was included in their manifesto for the 1997 general election. In his budget of 2 July 1997, Chancellor Gordon Brown announced VAT on domestic fuel would be reduced to 5% from 1 September 1997.[6]

A 1997 research paper prepared by the House of Commons Library indicated the 8% VAT rate raised £850m in 1994–95, and £1.1bn in 1995–96.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bygone budgets: November 1994. 3 March 1999. The Guardian. 10 December 2022.
  2. Web site: Budget 94 – BBC Two – 29 November 1994 . BBC . BBC Genome . 10 December 2022.
  3. Web site: Budgets 1993 – 1995. BBC News. 10 December 2022.
  4. Web site: UK government loses fuel tax vote. UPI. 7 December 1994. 10 December 2022.
  5. Web site: Text of the 1994 Budget – 29 November 1994 – The Rt. Hon. Sir John Major KG CH. 12 December 2022.
  6. Web site: Antony . Seely . VAT on fuel & power . Parliament.uk . 9 July 1997 . 12 December 2022.