Budget Update!

March 23, 2011 in Budget News, Finance, UK

This afternoon I delivered my second Budget. I wanted to write to you immediately to explain our plans and set out some of the key measures.

Last year’s Emergency Budget was about rescuing the nation’s finances and paying for Labour’s mistakes. Today’s Budget sticks to the plan, and focuses on reforming the economy to ensure jobs and growth for the future. I am also doing what I can help to families with the cost of living – including an immediate cut to fuel duty.

I know times aren’t easy for families at the moment, so this Budget announced help, including:

• An immediate cut in fuel duty by 1 pence per litre and a delay of April’s inflation rise in duty to next January. This means fuel duty is 6 pence lower than it would be under Labour. We are paying for this by putting up taxes on the oil companies while the oil price is high to create a Fair Fuel Stabiliser.
• An increase in the personal allowance from £6,500 to £8,100 over the next two years. This will mean £326 extra for working people and it will lift over a million low paid people out of tax altogether.
• £250 million to help 10,000 first time buyers get on the housing ladder.
• A freeze in Air Passenger Duty this year.
• Money for councils so virtually every council in England will freeze council tax next month.
• A new scheme to allow Gift Aid to be claimed on the contents of charities’ collecting tins and street buckets, and support for largest donations with radical reforms to Inheritance Tax – if you leave 10 per cent or more of your estate to charity, then the Government will take 10 per cent off your inheritance tax bill.

As well as helping in the short term we need to reform our economy to create growth and jobs in the future. The hard truth is that Britain has lost ground in the world economy.

Under Labour manufacturing halved, and growth depended on unsustainable public spending, debt and financial services. We need a new model of growth based on investment, manufacturing and exports – a Britain that makes things again. This Budget started that process, with measures that include:

• An additional 1p cut in corporation tax. In April this year corporation tax will fall from 28% to 26%. It will continue to fall by 1% in each of the following three years reaching 23%. Britain will be competitive again.
• Doubling Entrepreneurs Relief to £10m and sweeping changes to the generosity, simplicity and reach of the Enterprise Investment Scheme, with an increase in the income tax relief available from 20% to 30%.
• An extension of the small business rate relief holiday for another year.
• An additional £100m for new science facilities and more generous tax credits for small business research and development.
• 21 new Enterprise Zones with business rate cuts and new broadband to promote growth across the country.
• A review of the revenue raised by the temporary 50p rate of income tax.
• 50,000 additional apprenticeships and 100,000 work placements for young people.
• £3bn for a Green Investment Bank, which will generate an additional £15 billion in private sector investment in green projects and low carbon energy.

The Confederation of British Industry has already endorsed our approach saying: “This Budget will help businesses grow and create jobs.”

So this is our plan – reforming the economy to create jobs and supporting families. This Budget will put fuel back in the tank of Britain’s economy.

George Osborne
Chancellor of the Exchequer

March 2010 Budget

March 25, 2010 in Budget News, Finance

Budget or a pre election broadcast?

The Chancellor, Alistair Darling gave his final budget before there is a general election on Wednesday 24th March. He made very few announcements as the majority of tax rates and allowances had already been released in previous Budgets and the Pre Budget Report given in December. The key announcements were:

  • Annual Investment Allowance increased to £100,000 for capital expenditure by businesses
  • Entrepreneurs Relief doubled to £2 million
  • Relief for first time buyers from Stamp Duty Land Tax on residential transactions up to £250,000
  • VAT Registration threshold increased to £70,000

Our commentary on the budget is available on The George Hay Chartered Accountants’ website at www.georgehay.co.uk which gives further information on announcements made.

DON’T COUNT YOUR CHICKENS!

February 14, 2010 in Basic Skills, Development, Startup

 Robert Ashton, is an entrepreneur, and challenging
 business author.  His books including 'How to Sell'
 are published by Hamlyn.  Visit www.robertashton.co.uk
 to find out more.

 Robert kindly agreed to contribute a regular column
 to ‘Wising UP!’ so this was the  first of of our
 “Ten Ways...” series from the first issue of Wising
 UP in 2003! - as useful now as when first published.

It’s all too easy to assume that everything’s going to turn out just fine. But the wily entrepreneur makes sure he’s chosen the right eggs to sit on. Here are ten ways you can be  sure you’re hatching winners!

  1. RESEARCH YOUR MARKET There are very few truly original ideas. Someone, somewhere will be already doing what you’re planning. Make sure your idea looks different and stays different.
  2. ASK A FRIEND Bounce your business ideas off someone who’ll tell you straight if they think the idea’s a runner or not. Some advisors tell you what you want to hear. Seek honest feedback.
  3. STOCK THE FRIDGE Investing in a new business, product or service always takes longer than you think. Make sure you can afford to eat as you wait for the payback.
  4. SHARE THE WORK Cuckoos lay their eggs in others’ nests and let them do the work. Who could help you incubate your new idea? Ask Business Link for ideas.
  5. USE A RULER Benchmark your progress against that of others chasing the same market. You could be doing well, but still be underperforming against your rivals and therefore capable of achieving more.
  6. ROTTEN EGGS SMELL BAD Some ideas won’t hatch. Accept this, carefully and quickly ditch the losers and focus on your winners. Losers are like bad eggs, the longer you keep them, the worse they get!
  7. BE FLEXIBLE Customers occasionally use your product or service in ways you never envisaged. Celebrate their innovation and use it to win business elsewhere
  8. RIDE THE STORMS At times, incubating your new idea will be very uncomfortable. If you’re sure it’s a winner, sit tight and wait for the sunshine.
  9. FEED YOUR CHICKS Once hatched, new business ideas can devour resources at an alarming rate before becoming profitable. Another reason to focus on winners.
  10. EMPTY THE NEST Could you do better if you started all over again? Never rule out selling your venture to free up the time and capital to do it a second time. Always know what your business is worth.

2010 International Council for Small Business Conference

September 3, 2009 in Development

ICSB 2010 World Conference
Date: June 24-27, 2010
Venue: Hilton Cincinnati Netherland Plaza, Cincinnati, Ohio USA
http://www.icsb2010.org

“Entrepreneurship: Bridging Global Boundaries”

At least 300-500 participants from over 70 countries are expected to attend

Deadline for Submissions 15 February 2010
Early Registration Deadline 30 April 2010

We invite you to submit papers, case studies, workshop and/or symposia
proposals that deal directly or indirectly with
:

  • Entrepreneurship Education
  • Individual Entrepreneurship
  • Women and Minority Entrepreneurship
  • Small Business and SME’s in Developing Economies
  • Public Policy
  • Entrepreneurship and Technology
  • Family Business
  • Corporate Entrepreneurship
  • International Entrepreneurship
  • Entrepreneurship in the Arts
  • Entrepreneurship Across the Curriculum
  • Social Entrepreneurship
  • Additional topics of interest and value to ICSB’s membership

Contact Us:

University of Cincinnati Center for Entrepreneurship Education & Research

Charles H. Matthews, Ph.D.
Professor and Executive Director
Center for Entrepreneurship Education & Research
College of Business
University of Cincinnati
Cincinnatio, OH 45221-0165
Phone: 513-556-7123
Fax: 513-556-5499
Email: charles.matthews@uc.edu

ICSB 2010 Conference Secretariat
Katy Roberto Marston
Program Manager
University of Cincinnati
P.O. Box 210031
51 Goodman Dr. Suite 200
Cincinnati, OH 45221-0031
Phone: 513.558.1810
Fax: 513.558.0385
Email: katy.roberto@uc.edu

ICSB International Office

The George Washington University School of Business
2201 G. Street, NW
Funger Hall Suite 315
Washington, DC 20052 USA
Phone: +1 202 994-0704
Fax: +1 202 994-4930
E-mail: icsb@gwu.edu
Web: www.icsb.org

Extracted from http://www.icsb.org