Budget of the United Kingdom
Website | https://www.gov.uk |
---|
The Autumn Budget of the British Government is an annual budget set by HM Treasury for the following financial year, with the revenues to be gathered by HM Revenue and Customs and the expenditures of the public sector, in compliance with government policy.[1] The budget is one of two statements given by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, with the Spring Statement being given the following year.
Budgets are usually set once every year and are announced in the House of Commons by the Chancellor of the Exchequer. The latest budget took place on Wednesday 8 March 2017 and was the last spring budget.[2] From 2017 the United Kingdom budget will take place in Autumn in order to allow major tax changes to occur annually, well before the start of the fiscal year.[3]
Budget process
The UK fiscal year ends on 5 April each year. The financial year ends on 31 March of each year. Thus, the UK budget for financial year 2011 would cover the period from 1 April 2011 to 31 March 2012 and is often referred to as 2011–12.
The budget is usually released in March, less than one month before the beginning of the new fiscal year. Parliament is not expected to take action on a budget for the fiscal year until the summer, several months after the start of the fiscal year. For that reason, Parliament typically passes a "Vote on Account" in early spring that provides continuity of funding into the new fiscal year, up until the point that the new budget is enacted. The spending authorized in the Vote on Account is normally 45% of the amounts already authorized in the current fiscal year, taking into account the Main Estimates and any revised or Supplementary Estimates already approved by Parliament.[4] Legislative action on the proposed budget generally aligns with the executive's original budget request, since the Prime Minister's cabinet tends to exert significant control over Parliament (the Prime Minister must have a majority in the House of Commons to retain power).
Governmental departments submit their funding requests — called "Main Supply Estimates" – to HM Treasury. The government then releases this data in a large consolidated document titled "Central Government Supply Estimates (Budget Year-Following Year): Main Supply Estimates" [5]
The government reserves the right to submit "Supplementary Estimates" in the spring and winter of a given fiscal year to update its agencies' spending totals for the current financial year and report any governmental re-organizations. When an agency submits a Supplementary Estimate, it is customary to also submit an "Estimate Memorandum" to the agency's relevant oversight committee in Parliament describing and justifying the changes. This condenses two functions – reporting supplemental spending requests and agency re-organizations.
List of budgets
- 2017, March
- 2016
- 2015, July
- 2015, March
- 2014
- 2013
- 2012
- 2011
- 2010, June 'emergency'
- 2010, March original
- 2009
- 2008
- 2007 (see also United Kingdom budget 2007-08 )
See also
- Countries of the United Kingdom by GVA per capita
- United Kingdom national debt
- Budget Day
- Economy of the United Kingdom
- Departments of the United Kingdom Government
- Government spending in the United Kingdom
- Whole of Government Accounts
References
- ↑ "[ARCHIVED CONTENT] PESA 2007". Hm-treasury.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 29 January 2013. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
- ↑ https://www.gov.uk/government/news/spring-budget-2017-date-confirmed
- ↑ "Autumn Statement 2016;". November 2016.
|section=
ignored (help) - ↑ "Central Government Supply Estimates 2012–13; Vote on Account, HC 1756" (PDF). February 2012. p. 3. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 February 2014.
- ↑ "Central Government Supply Estimates (2011–12): Main Supply Estimates" (PDF). 26 April 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 February 2014.
Further reading
- Browning, Peter. The Treasury and Economic Policy: 1964-1985 (Longman, 1986).
- Dell, Edmund. The Chancellors: A History of the Chancellors of the Exchequer, 1945-90 (HarperCollins, 1997) 619pp; 17 chapters covering the terms of each Chancellor.
- Fairclough, Isabela, and Norman Fairclough. "Practical reasoning in political discourse: The UK government’s response to the economic crisis in the 2008 Pre-Budget Report." Discourse & Society 22.3 (2011): 243-268. online
- Walsh, Catherine. "Protesting Too Much: Alastair Darling's constructions after the Financial Crash." Critical Discourse Studies 13.1 (2016): 41-56.
- Woodward, Nicholas. The management of the British economy, 1945-2001 (Manchester University Press, 2004).