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Summary

  • New compulsory living wage of £9 hour by 2020

  • Chancellor delays plan for a budget surplus by a year

  • £37bn of spending cuts planned for this parliament

  • CBI warns of 'gamble' of raising minimum wage

  • Peston: 'Less austerity, more taxes'

  • Mortgage interest tax relief to be limited on buy-to-let

  • Tax on corporate profits to be cut to 18%

  1. What does it all add up to?published at 20:39

    The Resolution Foundation, an apolitical think tank, has been poring over the Budget fine print - the rising minimum wage, income tax cuts and cuts to benefits - and calculated its estimates for the overall effect of the package on different sorts of families in 2020. 

    For a quick summary, see

  2. Lower means higher?published at 20:19

    A comment by Financial Times economics editor on the Budget, as tweeted by Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú Newsnight policy editor Chris Cook:  

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  3. 'Not acceptable'published at 20:06

    Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú News Channel

    Sam Fairbairn

    A protest against the planned welfare cuts took place in Westminster earlier. Sam Fairbairn, People's Assembly national secretary, spoke to the Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú News Channel.

    Quote Message

    Osborne has announced £12bn in cuts to welfare. It's hitting young people incredibly hard. On top of all of that, public sector wages have been capped at 1% rise. This isn't an acceptable situation. We know tens of billions are lost every year in tax avoidance."

  4. 'Con tricks'published at 19:39

    Scotland's deputy first minister John Swinney has slammed the Budget as "a series of con tricks" to try to hide the impact on households.

    Swinney
    Quote Message

    The Chancellor has not even promised to meet the current living wage of £7.85 and under-25s will face the brunt of cuts but receive no increase in wages. The Chancellor is cutting from the poor whilst paying out to the rich, he is short changing those on low incomes whilst giving tax breaks to the better off. The reality is that in delivering his emergency Budget the Chancellor has simply exacerbated the emergency situation faced by many on low pay and low incomes."

  5. Allegra Stratton on the living wagepublished at 19:21

    Quote Message

    Number 10 is cockahoop with its living wage announcement and sources say this was something the Chancellor has been looking at for a couple of years but felt he couldn't go for without big cuts to the welfare bill, and those were blocked within the last parliament by the Lib Dems. Free of those shackles, he was able to go for the two step - cuts to welfare, and an increase in the living wage.

    Allegra Stratton, Newsnight political editor

    More analysis on

  6. Osborne 'should have been bolder': Johnsonpublished at 19:07

    Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, tells the Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú that the Chancellor should have been bolder in his reforms to the tax system:

    Quote Message

    What's a bit disappointing is that he doesn't really have anything that looks like a strategy for a significant change to the tax system. We don't have anything laid out here which tells me that at the end of this parliament we will have a more sensible tax system than we had at the beginning of it."

  7. Political sketchpublished at 17:53 British Summer Time 8 July 2015

    Spectator cartoonist tweets...

  8. 'Ridiculous sitation'published at 17:49

    Shadow business secretary Chukka Umunna, says the Budget will do little to boost poor productivity levels in Britain.

    Chuka
    Quote Message

    We need to see much more done, in particular around productivity. The ridiculous situation right now where people in our country who are doing amongst the longest hours in western Europe but their output is less than an average worker in the G7 - and that's because, frankly, they're not being given the tools to do the trade."

  9. Sign herepublished at 17:46 British Summer Time 8 July 2015

    Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú political correspondent tweets...

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  10. National living wage for public sectorpublished at 17:43
    Breaking

    The Treasury has confirmed that the national living wage will "definitely apply" to public sector workers. A spokesman said: "It's just like minimum wage - legally enforceable."

  11. Hit for housingpublished at 17:40 British Summer Time 8 July 2015

    Political Editor at Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú South West tweets...

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  12. Changes at universitiespublished at 17:38

    Students on graduation dayImage source, Getty Images
    Quote Message

    The Budget has a lot to digest within it, but one morsel worth chewing over is the section on universities. The government has replaced grants with maintenance loans. But the document may also mark an important intellectual shift in the way that we run our higher education system, as it will introduce a rather radical idea - different universities deserve very different treatment."

    Chris Cook, Newsnight Policy Editor

    More analysis on

  13. 'Punitive tax'published at 17:34

    CarsImage source, PA

    Some reaction from the motoring industry to the announcement of a new emissions-based Vehicle Excise Duty (VED). Mike Hawes, of the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, says:

    Quote Message

    We recognise the current system needs to be reformed and highlighted this in a recent report. The chancellor's Budget announcement on the regime came as a surprise and is of considerable concern. The introduction of a surcharge on premium cars also risks undermining growth in UK manufacturing and exports. British-built premium cars are in increasing demand at home and globally, and the industry helps to support almost 800,000 jobs in the UK. Levelling a punitive tax on these vehicles will almost certainly impact domestic demand."

  14. Then and nowpublished at 17:28

    Ken Clarke

    Time for a little flashback - this was the last time we had an all-Conservative Budget. It was Ken Clarke who held aloft the red box in 1996.

  15. 'Growing up poor'published at 17:23

    Child povertyImage source, Getty

    Some more reaction to the possible impact of the Budget on children.

    Child Poverty Action Group's Alison Garnham says:

    Quote Message

    The suggestion that higher tax allowances will offset tax credit cuts is sheer fallacy: 44% of adults earn too little to pay income tax and those on slightly higher wages gain little because tax credits are withdrawn as incomes rise. The impact will be dramatic: as Supreme Court judges have noted, the current cap deprives children of the basic necessities of life, in breach of international law."

    Barnardo's chief executive Javed Khan says:

    Quote Message

    Tax credit cuts could blow a £1,200 hole in some families budgets, leaving them struggling to cover even the cost of basics such as school uniforms for their children. Children who grow up poor are more likely to be ill, do worse at school and be jobless in future."

  16. Public sector paypublished at 17:21 British Summer Time 8 July 2015

    Political website tweets...

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  17. Osborne and the leadershippublished at 17:20

    Quote Message

    Many believe that come 2018 there will be a straight fight for who will become Conservative leader and de facto prime minister - between George Osborne and Boris Johnson. Bo Jo has gone hard on the London living wage... One Tory MP tells me that the surprise living wage announcement has helped Osborne neuter one of Boris’ key USPs.

    James Clayton, Newsnight Political producer

    George OsborneImage source, Reuters

    More analysis on .

  18. Child povertypublished at 17:14 British Summer Time 8 July 2015

    Columnist at the Independent on Sunday tweets...

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  19. Lib Dem 'blockage'published at 17:13

    FarronImage source, PA

    Liberal Democrat leadership candidate Tim Farron says many of the changes announced in today's Budget had been blocked by his party in the last Parliament.

    Quote Message

    For all its talk about striving, aspiration and creating a Northern Powerhouse, this Budget has delivered none of it. It shows that the Conservatives, devoid of fresh ideas, have simply rehashed old ones that were rejected over the last few years."

  20. Living wage vs tax creditspublished at 17:07

    FamilyImage source, PA

    Researcher Ben Richards, from left of centre think tank the Social Market Foundation, has been looking at the impact the announcements. He has this analysis:

    Quote Message

    A two-child family with one full-time earner on the minimum wage will receive £1,612 less in tax credits under the new system. The big question is: will the wage increases under the new living wage be enough to offset these cuts? The new £7.20 Living Wage will increase gross income by nearly £1,300 for the same family with a full-time earner, but the difficulty is that increases in gross income are offset by payments in national insurance and income tax, and decreases tax credits. This will mean that the family’s net income will not increase by nearly as much - by only around £255, for those not claiming housing benefit."