Stamp Duty Cut Survives Mini-Budget Overhaul
Author: Mark Langshaw
Former Content Manager
New Chancellor Jeremy Hunt announced today (17th October) an overhaul of last month’s Mini-Budget, and permanent cuts to stamp duty are one of the few measures to survive.
The former Foreign Secretary was expected to reverse some policies introduced under predecessor Kwasi Kwarteng’s disastrous fiscal event, which caused the pound to plummet and the economic outlook to deteriorate.
In addition to the stamp duty cut, reducing national insurance payments is the only other thing that Kwarteng’s announcements will continue to follow the government’s U-turn. Income tax changes and the abolition of the IR35 rule changes were among the measures thrown out.
Moreover, the Energy Price Guarantee has been amended and will now end next April, having originally been slated to last for two years. Hunt has pledged to review this policy when it expires and assess the most viable way to tackle the energy crisis going forward.
Kwarteng left his post last week after the fallout from the Mini-Budget saw the government come under fire. This made him the second shortest-serving Chancellor in UK history.
The stamp duty measures remaining in place will see the first £250,000 of a property purchase being exempt from the tax, up from the previous threshold of £125,000. First-time buyers will pay no tax on the first £425,000, up from £300,000 before.
Commenting on the government’s U-turn, Pete Mugleston, Online Mortgage Advisor’s managing director, said: “It’s good news that the stamp duty measures won’t be axed along with the other policies the government has chosen to shelve. We believe the cuts will help more first-time buyers onto the market at a time when getting a mortgage might prove more difficult for them.
“We are confident that the mortgage market will settle down and become more accessible for home buyers and home movers, although we must stress that the brokers we work with are still capable of finding competitive deals for customers, even though rates, on the whole, have risen. The government’s decision to reverse most of the Mini-Budget should help with this.”
It remains to be seen what impact the reversal of the Mini-Budget will have on interest rates ahead of the Bank of England’s next Monetary Policy Committee meeting on 3rd November, but the bank has previously hinted that a further increase to the base rate is likely.
Mark Langshaw
Former Content Manager
After graduating from Liverpool John Moores University in 2003, Mark discovered his passion for writing and returned to education to study for an NCTJ diploma in journalism. A rewarding media career, spanning 10 years and numerous industries, would follow.
Mark has held staff positions and freelanced for some of the biggest names in the UK media business, including Hearst Magazines and Future Publishing, writing for publications such as Esquire, leading football magazine Four Four Two and the Red Bull website.
He considers himself a versatile writer and editor, having specialised in a diverse range of subjects over the years, from technology to sport and entertainment.