51AVÊÓÆµ

Autumn Statement: Chancellor unveils machinery tax cuts, higher living wage and National Insurance reductions

Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt said his new budget was designed to 'turbo charge' the economy

Jane Thynne
Head of News and Business
clock • 2 min read
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt's Autumn Statement was designed to boost economy
Image:

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt's Autumn Statement was designed to boost economy

Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt presented his Autumn Statement by saying the Conservative's ‘plan for the British economy is working. But the work is not done.'

Mr Hunt unveiled a raft of measures to 'turbo charge the economy', including changes to planning laws, levelling-up and National Insurance cuts, as well as certain measures that will impact the farming sector.

In the first instance, he confirmed ‘full expensing' for businesses would be made permanent. This means for every £1 a business invests in IT, machinery and equipment, they can claim back 25p in corporation tax.

It was also announced that companies can benefit more quickly as the previous system meant businesses had to offset the cost against corporation tax over a longer period.

Mr Hunt said the change will cost £11bn a year and represents the ‘largest business tax cut in modern British history'.

"It means we have not just the lowest headline corporation tax rate in the G7 but its most generous capital allowances," he added.

However, president of the Country Land and Business Association (CLA) Victoria Vyvyan said: "From a tax perspective, this was an Autumn Statement that failed to recognise the potential of the rural economy, with thousands of rural businesses excluded from what were largely urban-centric measures.

Increases

For the self-employed, Mr Hunt revealed Class 2 National Contributions would be abolished saving around two million workers around £192 each year. He also announced that National Insurance for employees would be cut from 12 per cent to 10 per cent, while the minimum wage will be increased to £11.44 per hour.

Mr Hunt said that the Government had ‘taken the difficult decision and instead of entering a recession the UK economy has grown.'

More on Politics

Wales' Cabinet Minister to do 'right thing, not the easy thing' on bovine TB

Wales' Cabinet Minister to do 'right thing, not the easy thing' on bovine TB

Farmers Guardian's chief reporter sits down with Cabinet Minister for rural resilience and sustainability, Llyr Gruffydd to discuss his farming policies for Wales

Rachael Brown
clock 01 July 2026 • 5 min read
Oxfordshire Council called on to scrap 'plant-based edict' as more councils reverse decision

Oxfordshire Council called on to scrap 'plant-based edict' as more councils reverse decision

Enfield Council and Calderdale Council have announced they are putting meat and dairy back on the menu

Alex Black
clock 29 June 2026 • 2 min read
'Shockingly bad' and 'vague', opposition MPs deliver their verdict on Labour's  Farming Roadmap

'Shockingly bad' and 'vague', opposition MPs deliver their verdict on Labour's Farming Roadmap

Conservative and LibDem rural representatives criticise document saying it will do nothing to support farmers

Jane Thynne
clock 27 June 2026 • 4 min read