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United Kingdom economic statement delivered by the Chancellor of the Exchequer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Spring Statement of the British Government, also known as the "mini-budget", is one of the two statements HM Treasury makes each year to Parliament upon publication of economic forecasts, the second being the Autumn Statement presented later in the year. At 2016's autumn statement, it was announced the budget would move to the autumn, with a spring statement taking place the following year. Both usually involve speeches in the House of Commons by the Chancellor of the Exchequer. The Spring Statement for 2019 took place in March 2019. In 2020 the spring statement was upgraded to a full budget following cancellation of autumn 2019's budget.[1][2] and additional statements were made in summer and autumn 2020.[3] In 2021 the spring statement was also replaced by a full budget.[4]
The duty to publish two annual economic forecasts was created by the Industry Act 1975, with the first such publication occurring in December 1976.[5] The first Autumn Statement combined the announcement of this publication with any announced changes to national insurance contributions and the Government's announcement of its spending plans (and publication of the Red Book)[citation needed],[6] both of which were also made at approximately the same time in the parliamentary year.
In 1993, Conservative Chancellor Kenneth Clarke combined the announcement of spending with the Budget, merging tax and spending announcements. Doing so moved the Budget to November. To fulfill the legal obligation to make two statements, Clarke began the practice of making a Summer Statement focusing on economic growth forecasts.[7][8] Unlike the Autumn Statements preceding them and the Pre-Budget Reports that replaced them, Summer Statements took the form of debate on a motion "that this House welcomes the publication of the Government's latest economic forecast, which..." rather than as a statement to the House of Commons.[9][10][11]
In 1997, Labour's new Chancellor, Gordon Brown, moved the Budget back to spring and replaced the second statement with the Pre-Budget Report (PBR). According to the "Code for Fiscal Stability", published by HM Treasury in November 1998, the PBR was intended to "encourage debate on the proposals under consideration for the Budget". The PBR included a report on progress since the Budget, an update on the state of the national economy and the Government's finances, and announcements of proposed new tax measures and consultation papers.[8]
Conservative Chancellor George Osborne replaced the PBR and its policy announcements in 2010 with a new Autumn Statement focusing on economic growth and government finances as projected by the Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR).[12] Osborne's 2015 statement on 25 November was a joint Autumn Statement and Spending Review, and included a new forecast by the OBR.[13]
In 2016, Conservative Chancellor Philip Hammond announced his intention to end the Autumn Statement: instead of a Budget in the Spring, and an Autumn Statement, there will instead be a Budget in the Autumn, and a Spring Statement, with the first on 13 March 2018.[14]
Chancellor | Date | Type |
---|---|---|
Geoffrey Howe | 8 November 1982[6] | Autumn Statement |
Nigel Lawson | 17 November 1983[15] | |
12 November 1984[16] | ||
12 November 1985[17] | ||
6 November 1986[18] | ||
3 November 1987[19] | ||
1 November 1988[20] | ||
John Major | 15 November 1989[21] | |
8 November 1990[22] | ||
Norman Lamont | 6 November 1991[23] | |
12 November 1992[24] | ||
Kenneth Clarke | 18 July 1994[9] | Summer Statement |
12 July 1995[10] | ||
17 July 1996[11] | ||
Gordon Brown | 25 November 1997[25] | Pre-Budget Report |
3 November 1998[26] | ||
9 November 1999[27] | ||
8 November 2000[28] | ||
27 November 2001[29] | ||
27 November 2002[30] | ||
10 December 2003[31] | ||
2 December 2004[32] | ||
5 December 2005[33] | ||
6 December 2006[34] | ||
Alistair Darling | 9 October 2007[35] | |
24 November 2008[36] | ||
9 December 2009[37] | ||
George Osborne | 29 November 2010[38] | Autumn Statement |
29 November 2011[39] | ||
5 December 2012[40] | ||
5 December 2013[41] | ||
3 December 2014[42] | ||
25 November 2015[43] | ||
Philip Hammond | 23 November 2016[44] | |
13 March 2018[45] | Spring Statement | |
13 March 2019[46] | ||
Rishi Sunak | 8 July 2020 | Summer Statement |
24 September 2020 | Winter Economy Plan | |
23 March 2022 | Spring Statement | |
Kwasi Kwarteng | 23 September 2022 | The Growth Plan 2022 |
Jeremy Hunt | 17 November 2022 | Autumn Statement |
22 November 2023[47] | Autumn Statement |
The statement has been held in the past during different seasons and with alternate names:
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