The Saving Gateway and the Child Trust Fund

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Transcript The Saving Gateway and the Child Trust Fund

Budget 2003 Briefing
Institute for Fiscal Studies
www.ifs.org.uk/budgetindex.shtml
Measures affecting households
Matthew Wakefield
Outline
• Distributional analysis of measures
directly affecting households
• Child Trust Fund
The Measures
• £100 per year if aged 80+
• Housing Benefit disregard
• Duty freeze on spirits, cider, sparkling
wine
The Measures
• £100 per year if aged 80+
• £ 180m
• Housing Benefit disregard
• £ 45m
• Duty freeze on spirits, cider, sparkling wine
• £ 30m
• Total cost: £ 255m
Distributional Effects
Gain, % income
0.30
0.20
0.10
0.00
Poorest 2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9 Richest
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
or
es
t
9
Ri
ch
es
t
Po
Gain, % income
Distributional Effects
6
4
2
0
-2
Effects by family type
Family Type
Average weekly change
Budget 2003
Single parent
32p
SE couple w kids
26p
Single pensioner
61p
Pensioner couple
69p
Effects by family type
Family Type
Average weekly change
Budget 2003 Preannounced
Single parent
32p
£8.85
SE couple w kids
26p
£2.72
Single pensioner
61p
£7.55
Pensioner couple
69p
£8.72
Measures omitted
• Not affecting households directly
• Company car tax (+£125m)
• Anti-VAT fraud (+£235m)
• Fuel duty freeze (-£300m in 2003/04)
• The Child Trust Fund (-£235m)
The Child Trust Fund
• Endowment at birth £250 / £500
• Cost: £ 235million
•
•
•
•
Additional contributions from family/friends
Accessible at 18
No restrictions on how funds can be spent
Open market competition
The Child Trust Fund: issues
• Full proposals in summer
• Further state contributions?
• Incentives to family/friends?
• Accounts by 2005
Why a Child Trust Fund?
• Change distribution of wealth for young
adults:
• £ 250 to £ 600
• £ 500 to £ 1200
• Accurately targeted?
• regular testing
Why a Child Trust Fund?
• Change distribution of wealth for young adults
• Lump-sum to 18 year olds: ‘Asset effect’
• Plus learn
• forward planning and
• managing financial assets
• Alternatives
Conclusions
• CTF new, will help a certain group
• Small set of changes to taxes / benefits
The Public Finances
Christine Frayne
Changes since November
PBR
• GDP forecast changes :
• 2003: 2½–3% to 2–2½%
• 2004: 3–3½% unchanged
• 2005: 2¾–3¼% to 3–3½%
Changes since November
PBR
• Budget measures :
• 2003-04: - £0.5bn,
(+ £0.3bn with margin reset)
• 2004-05: - £0.3bn
(- £1.2bn with margin reset)
• 2005-06: + £0.1bn
(- £1.6bn with margin reset)
Meeting the golden rule?
Cyclically adjusted current budget surplus
Percentage of GDP
3.0
Budget 2002
PBR 2002
Budget 2003
2.0
1.0
0.0
-1.0
-2.0
-3.0
Year
96–97 97–98 98–99 99–00 00–01 01–02 02–03 03–04 04–05 05–06 06–07 07–08
Source: HM Treasury
Increase in spending
£ billion
Change
since PBR
2002-03
2003-04
2004-05
2005-06
1.2
0.9
3.0
4.9
– War contingency reserve
– AME reserve (reduced CMF spending)
– Social security benefits
– Local authority self-financed expenditure
– Higher debt interest spending
Revenue forecasts
Receipts – Budget 2002
Receipts – PBR 2002
Receipts – Budget 2003
Percentage of GDP
42
40
38
36
34
32
30
96–97
97–98
98–99
99–00
00–01
01–02
02–03
Year
03–04
04–05
05–06
06–07
07–08
Source: HM Treasury
Change in revenue forecasts
£bn
2002-03 2003-04 2004-05
200506
2006-07
–10.7
–14
–9
–2
0
Equity prices
–1
–3½
–5
–5
–5
Compliance and
enforcement
0
2½
3½
4
4
Financial company
profits
–5
–6
–4½
–1½
–1
Other economic &
forecasting effects
–5
–5½
-2½
0
1½
Total nondiscretionary changes
Source: HM Treasury
Conclusions
• Treasury forecasts:
• Golden rule to be met over current economic cycle
• Higher borrowing only temporary
• But how cautious are these forecasts?
• IFS Green Budget forecasts: £4bn to £11bn tax
increases
• Additional spending pressures:
• Child poverty target
• World-class public services?
Budget 2003 Briefing
Institute for Fiscal Studies
www.ifs.org.uk/budgetindex.shtml