INHERITANCE TAX
- The inheritance tax starting point will not be going up to £1 million any time soon.
INCOME TAX AND NATIONAL INSURANCE
- The Lib Dems’ proposals to raise the personal income tax allowance to £10,000, for the benefit of low and middle-income workers, from April 2011 will likely remain.
- The parties have both agreed to keep Gordon Brown's 1p National Insurance rise for individuals, though not for businesses.
CAPITAL GAINS TAX
- The CGT rate is expected to rise from 18% to 40% - how this will be implemented is unknown. Timing-wise it could be effective from the date of the emergency Budget or retrospectively applied (i.e backdated to 6th April 2010).
PROPERTY
- Home information packs (HIPS) will be abolished.
EMERGENCY BUDGET
- An emergency Budget is expected within 50 days.
PENSIONS
- The Daily Telegraph state that ‘’The earnings link for the basic state pension will be restored in April 2011. The parties promised a “triple guarantee”: that pensions would be raised by the higher of earnings, prices or 2.5pc, as proposed by the Liberal Democrats’’.
- The date at which the state pension age starts to rise to 66 will be set, although it will not be sooner than 2016 for men and 2020 for women.
- The rules requiring compulsory annuity purchase at 75 will be scrapped.
- The coalition also committed to establishing an independent commission to review the long-term affordability of public sector pensions, while protecting accrued rights.
- There has been no announcement yet on pensions tax relief. The Liberal Democrats had pledged to abolish all higher-rate relief, limiting the tax benefit to the basic rate. Some commentators think this likely.
BENEFITS AND TAX CREDITS
- The parties have agreed that reductions could be made to tax credits for higher earners.
- They also plan to end all existing welfare to work programmes and replace them with a single scheme to help all unemployed people get back into work.
- The Conservative manifesto promised a tax break for married couples (although the Lib Dems are not required to back this). So may be unlikely.
CHILD TRUST FUNDS
- The Government will implement Tory plans to restrict contributions to child trust funds to poorer families.
GREEN TAXES
- The Lib Dem policy of taxing planes rather than passengers has been adopted as one of the coalition’s green policies, it has been reported.
VAT
- There is speculation that VAT could increase from 17.5 to 20% to fund the income tax cuts. The UK currently enjoys the fourth lowest VAT rate in Europe (see my post Latest report fuels talk of a post-election VAT increase)
So there you have it, a whistle stop tour of how commentators are interpreting the coalition agreement. Obviously I can’t vouch for the accuracy of the reporting or speculation as quite frankly I have no intention of reading the agreement.