Christmas: a time for pensions and tax returns?
Christmas: a time for pensions and tax returns?
Chancellor Rachel Reeves is expected to implement “significant tax increases” in the upcoming Autumn Budget, according to analysts at Goldman Sachs.
Speculation is mounting that the UK autumn budget will be delivered on 26 November.
Inflation rises to 3.8% in July.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has deliberately declined to rule out the introduction of a wealth tax ahead of the autumn Budget, despite escalating borrowing pressures.
Retailers Warn £1.7bn Business Rates Hike Could Accelerate High Street Decline
Bank of England Could Cut Rates More Than Expected If Reeves Raises Taxes, Say Economists
The Chancellor appeared visibly emotional during Wednesday’s PMQs, with a spokesperson later attributing her reaction to a “personal matter.” However, it has since emerged that Reeves had a private confrontation
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has come under fire for allegedly using questionable figures in her spending review, after failing to explain how government departments would achieve planned savings clearly.
Rachel Reeves has scrapped plans to cut the tax-free Isa allowance, bowing to growing pressure from the City.
Rachel Reeves has declined to rule out further tax increases in her upcoming autumn Budget.
According to a leading economist, Rachel Reeves’s tax-hiking Budget has had “a chilling impact on confidence, hiring, and investment. ”