For the second year running chancellor Rachel Reeves significantly raised taxes in her Autumn Budget - this time to the tune of £26bn. While less than last year’s expected cumulative c£40bn tax raid, it still amounts to a substantial sum that will push the projected tax take, as a percentage of GDP, up to 38% by 2029-30 - a record high.
But it’s not just the quantum of the tax rises seen over the last two years that catch the eye. So too, the breadth of tax-raising measures taken - a consequence of Labour’s 2024 General Election manifesto pledge not to raise income tax rates, VAT or National Insurance contributions (NICs) for employees. Aside from breaking the pledge, the chancellor had little option but to raise or tinker with a whole raft of taxes.