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UK Budget 2008

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Darling plays it safe amid turmoil

Alistair Darling signalled that the British economy is at the mercy of events in the financial markets as he unveiled a modest maiden Budget, ratcheting up borrowing and raising taxes on drinkers, motorists and business to bolster the public finances

Budget 2008 at a glance

At-a-glance summary of key measures

Related content and features

Video

Chancellor can’t hide red ink

Martin Wolf

Martin Wolf says the chancellor is too optimistic as we go into uncertain times with a worryingly large fiscal deficit and an

A Budget of small sums

Chris Giles

Chris Giles says Alistair Darling’s first Budget as chancellor is the tail of tax revenues which have been wagging the dog

In the hands of the credit markets

Philip Stephens

Philip Stephens doubts that Darling has done enough to catch up on the government’s child poverty reduction targets.

Darling’s plastic bag Budget

Matthew Vincent

Matthew Vincent on why Darling’s first Budget was thin on major measures, aiming not to scare middle England voters

Comment & analysis

Stability is the new prudence

Martin Wolf

The chancellor used the new watchword at least 23 times. But ‘Prudence’ never crossed Darling’s lips. This is a telling shift writes Martin Wolf

Sketch: Speech bereft of secrets

Matthew Engel

They said Darling would have little worth saying and that he would say it in a boring manner. They were wrong, writes Matthew Engel

The ‘whatever’ speech is welcome

Jonathan Guthrie sees a lack of daring or direction

John Plender: Upheavals push the chancellor to the sidelines

Risk is being repriced across the world

Lex: Three is the magic number

The risk of a sharp and sustained downturn in the UK is real enough

    A gamble on global markets

    Philip Stephens

    Darling’s future depends on whether the darkening clouds on global credit markets break into another storm, says Philip Stephens

    A ‘make-work’ budget

    Willem Buiter

    The Budget was a hodge­podge of platitudes and half-measures of things that could happen, say Willem Buiter and Anne Sibert

    Dull and determined approach

    Nick Timmins makes a plea for the public sector

    Editorial Comment: Darling crosses his fingers

    The Budget was devoid of significant fiscal changes

    Westminster blog

    It takes an exceptional orator to provide such dour delivery

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        Q&A

        What does the Budget mean for you?

        How will the new Budget measures affect your personal finances? The FT’s specialists answer your questions

          More stories

          Business to pay £600m a year in extra taxes

          Warning for energy companies

          Higher gilt targets push bonds lower

          Limited impact of CGT change fails to quell anger

          Tax increase for high-emission cars

          Education spending to be cut

          Boost for social housing

          Measures to cut children in poverty by 250,000

          Price of beer and cigarettes to rise

          Delay to fuel tax calms motorists’ concerns

          Treasury looks to reduce N Rock debt to £14bn

          Savers keep pace with shifting tax goalposts

          Fig leaves to hide fiscal nakedness

          Reprieve on anti-avoidance rules

          Reactions to Darling’s first Budget