Showing posts with label finance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label finance. Show all posts

Saturday, 19 June 2010

Issues related with central government - Finance (part five)

(b) Explain direct taxes; indirect taxes; Public Sector Net Cash Requirement (PSNCR);GDP.

Indirect Taxes:often referred to as “hidden” or “stealth” taxes, these are embedded in the cost of items bough by individuals or companies. Value-Added Tax (VAT) and exercise duties on tobacco and alcohol are examples of indirect taxes. Because they are charged at a flat rate on relevant items, they are seen as regressive – i.e. they do not take account of an individual or company’s ability to pay.

Public sector net cash requirement (PSNCR): formerly the “public sector borrowing requirement” (PSBR), this is the sum of money that the British government will need to borrow through commercial loans or from the public in a given financial year to meet its public spending commitments – that is, it is the difference between the total taxation that the Exchequer expects to raise in a year and its actual outgoings.

Direct Taxes: an umbrella term for taxes, such as Income Tax and Corporation Tax, that are taken directly from the individual or company on whom they are levied, normally at a progressive rate determined by their income levels in a given financial year.

Gross Domestic Product(GDP): the total profit from all goods and services generated in Britain in a given financial year, irrespective of which state benefits from team.

Issues related with central government - Finance (part four)

There is press speculation over what the Chancellor of the Exchequer intends to do in the forthcoming budget to plug a £10bn hole in revenue predicted in the previous budget, due to lower than expected growth and a consequent fall in tax revenue.

The options are: to increase taxation; to increase borrowing; or to announce spending cuts.

You are preparing a feature article to inform your readers of the nature of the problem and its possible solution.

(a) Explain the purpose of the budget and how it is presented and debated in Parliament.


The budget is set out by the Chancellor of the Exchequer in a formal House of Commons Statement.

The purpose of the budget is to set out Government's taxation proposals for the next but one financial year and its spending proposals for the next three years. It also sets out the government's borrowing targets.

Budget proposals have to be approved by Parliament passing the Finance Bill but some tax changes can be implemented immediately (ie within a couple of hours) under delegated legislation.

The Finance Bill undergoes by a committee of the whole House and an ordinary standing committee.

As a money bill, the Finance cannot be delayed by the House of Lords. The fine details of the Budget is set out in the so-called red book, which is pored by accountants and tax advisors looking for loopholes.

Issues related with central government - Finance (part three)

2. Explain the following economic terms:

Recession: a term describing a rapid economic slowdown. Technically speaking, a recession is signaled by a period of two successive economic quarters during which the economy “shrinks” – that is, during which less money is being borrowed and spent by consumers, leading to lower sales and profits for businesses, the scaling back of production, and redundancies.

Public sector net cash requirement (PSNCR): formerly the “public sector borrowing requirement” (PSBR), this is the sum of money that the British government will need to borrow through commercial loans or from the public in a given financial year to meet its public spending commitments – that is, it is the difference between the total taxation that the Exchequer expects to raise in a year and its actual outgoings.

Consumer Prices Index (CPI): a few years ago, the Chancellor announced the Government now favoured a different way of reckoning inflation, the CPI, which does not include the costs of mortgages, and measures so-called “underlying inflation”. The CPI is the “official” measure of inflation.

Mortgages are not such a big factor in continental Europe where home-ownership is so prevalent as in the UK and Ireland, and far more people rent their homes. Purely coincidentally, this change was made just at a time when UK mortgage costs began to rise for the first time in many years.

Balance of Trade: the difference in value between imports to and exports from the UK in a given financial year, excluding financial transfers and debt payments to foreigners.

If Britain is importing consumer goods and services worth more than those it is exporting, it is in a “balance of trade deficit”; if the reverse is true, it is in a “balance of trade surplus”.

The UK is a net importer, that is, we import more goods than we export, which creates a balance of trade deficit. This deficit is, however, covered by the value of invisible exports, the services the UK sells abroad, such as banking and insurance.

The UK always shows a surplus on invisible exports, and it is frequently said that the country has shifted from being a manufacturing nation to relying on the service economy.

Indirect Taxes: often referred to as “hidden” or “stealth” taxes, these are embedded in the cost of items bough by individuals or companies.

Value-Added Tax (VAT) and exercise duties on tobacco and alcohol are examples of indirect taxes. Because they are charged at a flat rate on relevant items, they are seen as regressive – i.e. they do not take account of an individual or company’s ability to pay.

Progressive Taxes: broadly a tax based on the ability to pay, such as income tax. So the richer you are, the more you pay.

Issues related with central government - Finance (part two)

You have been asked to help write a short feature on the Budget and to compile a glossary of economic terms.

For the purpose of this exercise you are not required to write the article but to prepare the material.

1. Describe the purpose of the Budget and outline what the Chancellor will usually cover in his speech.


The Treasury's big day in each parliamentary session it the budget, in which the Chancellor sets out in a formal House of commons statement.

The purpose of the budget is to set out Government's taxation proposals for the next but one financial year and its spending proposals for the next three years. It also sets out the government's borrowing targets.

The budget speech is in the spring (on Aril 22 this year), but there is a pre-Budget report in the autumn, in effect a progress report on the UK's economic position and the Government's finances.

In the autumn statement, the Chancellor outlines the approach he is likely to take in the Budget.

Issues related with central government - Finance (part one)

You are helping on a Budget special and have been asked to prepare a brief for the editor explaining key terms for the readers and then to obtain quotes from local contacts to get reactions to the Budget.

Direct Taxes: an umbrella term for taxes, such as Income Tax and Corporation Tax, that are taken directly from the individual or company on whom they are levied, normally at a progressive rate determined by their income levels in a given financial year.

Inflation: This is general increase in the prices of goods and services, or to look at it another way, a fall in the purchasing power of the pound, caused by too much money chasing too few goods and services.

Inflation is calculated using either the Consumer Prices Index (CPI), or Retail Prices Index (RPI), which monitor fluctuations in the values of a notional “basket” of goods containing items regularly bought by a typical British household.

Although the CPI is the “official measure of inflation, the RPI figure is also published.

Recession: a term describing a rapid economic slowdown. Technically speaking, a recession is signaled by a period of two successive economic quarters during which the economy “shrinks” – that is, during which less money is being borrowed and spent by consumers, leading to lower sales and profits for businesses, the scaling back of production, and redundancies.

Gross Domestic Product(GDP): the total profit from all goods and services generated in Britain in a given financial year, irrespective of which state benefits from team.

Balance of Payments: the difference in value between imports to and exports from the UK in a given financial year, including all types of payment.

It encompasses both “visible” items (such as cars and refrigerators) and “invisible” ones (such as legal and financial services), as well as the value of financial transfers and debt payments to foreigners.

If the value of imports exceeds that of exports, Britain is in a “balance of payments deficit”; if the reverse if true, it is in a “balance of payment surplus”.

Public sector net cash requirement(PSNCR): formerly the “public sector borrowing requirement” (PSBR), this is the sum of money that the British government will need to borrow through commercial loans or from the public in a given financial year to meet its public spending commitments – that is, it is the difference between the total taxation that the Exchequer expects to raise in a year and its actual outgoings.

Chancellor of the Exchequer: the secretary of state in charge of the Treasury is known as the Chancellor of the Exchequer, an ancient title.

Interest rates: an instrument of monetary policy used to promote saving and investment, and reduce consumer spending.

Since the 1980s, raising interest rates has been the preferred method of controlling inflation. The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meets monthly to decide whether or not to raise or lower interest rates.