The budget is good news overall for young professionals – here’s how the changes will affect you
- Written by Andy Lymer, Professor of Taxation and Personal Finance, Aston University
Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s first budget was full of a dizzying array of measures to raise over £40 billion to fund public services and boost investment.
The headlines suggest most of the extra taxes to be paid will fall on businesses, not directly on “working people”. If you are recently out of university or early in your career, here are a few measures most likely to affect your life.
Inheritance tax
This 40% tax is paid[1] by the estates of those who pass away, before the remaining amount is distributed based on their wishes. It is really more of an estate tax, than a tax on what you inherit personally.
Little was changed to the tax itself in this budget – you can still receive £325,000 tax-free from each parent, or from your spouse or civil partner. If the estate includes a family home, they can pass this tax free between them and then to their descendants up to a value of £1 million (both get £500,000 each). Estate values beyond this are taxed at 40%.
The £325,000 threshold hasn’t changed since April 2009, so as house and asset prices rise it means more of an estate’s value over these levels will be subject to tax each year. If this threshold level had kept pace with changes in general prices, the basic inheritance tax threshold should now be more than £500,000[2].
The chancellor has decided to extend the fixing of this threshold for another two years – now to at least 2030.
Does this matter? Very much so, as budget forecasts suggest that while only 5% of current estates are subject to any tax, by 2029-30 this will double, so many more of us will get taxed on inheritances than ever before. This is because as prices keep rising, more and more inheritances will go over the threshold level and be subject to this tax.
However, this still implies 90% of all estates will be passed on tax-free so most will never end up bearing this tax.
Minimum wage rising
Another key change that is likely to disproportionately affect younger workers – national minimum wage is to rise. For those over 21, this will be by 6.7% to £12.21 per hour from April 2025. For a full-time employee, that is an extra £1,400 a year (before tax).
Those aged 18-20 will be getting an even larger rise to £10 per hour (a 16.3% increase on the current £8.60/hour).
This is good news for employees, but some fear it could lead to fewer jobs. However, it is a buyer’s market for some lower paid roles, as some industries are struggling to fill vacancies[8]. This may not be a worry for all jobs. Employers will have to pay the minimum wage to get staff they need.
As always, we will have to wait and see what changes this really creates as people react to the full range of announcements. But the overall government distribution predictions is that all but the very richest will be better off from this budget.
Very few young professionals fall into this category, so you can almost certainly expect to gain overall from this budget, even if not personally from every change.
References
- ^ 40% tax is paid (www.gov.uk)
- ^ more than £500,000 (www.ons.gov.uk)
- ^ Quarter Life series (theconversation.com)
- ^ end of the exemption (www.theguardian.com)
- ^ rise in stamp duty (www.bbc.co.uk)
- ^ expects (obr.uk)
- ^ fizkes/Shutterstock (www.shutterstock.com)
- ^ fill vacancies (www.gov.uk)