Chancellor Rachel Reeves has delivered her Budget, promising “stability, investment and reform as the platform from which British ambition can finally get moving again” and adding that she is making “the right choices for a fairer, a stronger, and a more secure Britain.”
The Chancellor announced plans to scrap the two-child benefit cap , increase the minimum wage, invest more in the NHS and devolved governments – as well as £26bn in tax rises by 2029.
The latter included cash ISA reform, freezing income tax thresholds, taxing salary-sacrificed pension contributions and a council tax levy on homes worth over £2m.
But, who will pay the price for this Budget? The i Paper’s experts explain.
Charlie Mullins: No worker will be better off after this rubbish
Every worker is supposed to be

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