Here are the key points from Chancellor Alistair Darling's 2008 Budget: CIGARETTES AND ALCOHOL
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• Cigarettes up 11p a packet of 20 from 1800 GMT; five cigars up 4p.
• Beer up by 4p a pint, wine 14p a bottle, spirits 55p a bottle and cider 3p a litre by Sunday.
• Duties on alcohol will go up by 2% above inflation in each of the next four years.
CARS, FUEL AND ROAD PRICING
• From 2009, major reform of the vehicle excise duty. For new cars from 2010, the lowest-polluting cars will pay no road tax in the first year, with the highest-polluting cars paying �950.
• Funding set aside for road-pricing proposals.
• 2p increase in fuel duty is postponed until October this year.
• For environmental reasons, fuel duty will rise by 0.5p per litre in real terms in 2010.
HOUSING
• From April, key workers, such as teachers and nurses, will be able to borrow money from shared equity schemes.
• Stamp duty on shared ownership homes will not be required until people own 80% of their home.
• More people should have the chance to have a long-term fixed mortgage, which a report shows can reduce the risks for first-time buyers and can keep them on the housing ladder.
• Sites for 70,000 more houses have been identified.
PENSIONERS
• Winter fuel allowance will go up from �200 to �250 for the over 60s and from �300 to �400 for the over 80s.
BENEFITS
• From October 2009, rules for housing and council tax benefit will mean families on benefit are better off in work.
• From April, 2009, child benefit will be increased to �20 a week.
• From April 2010, all long-term recipients of incapacity benefit will attend work capacity programmes.
BUSINESS
• �60m over three years for equipping people to return to the workplace.
• Corporation tax will fall from 30% to 28% by April this year, with simpler taxes for small companies.
• More help for small businesses, with capital gains tax remaining at 10%.
• Funds available through the small firms loans guarantee will increase by 60% in the next year.
• There will be a capital fund of �12.5m to encourage more women entrepreneurs.
AIRPORTS AND AIR TRAVEL
• New measures at Heathrow and other airports, using biometric technology, to speed up the time it takes to get through security checks.
• Increase in the amount airlines will have to pay to become "greener" - an extra 10% on plane duty in the second year of the new per-flight tax regime.
ENVIRONMENT
• Laws will be introduced by 2009 to tax plastic bags if shops do not do more to charge for their use.
• �26m to help make homes greener.
• New non-domestic buildings to become zero-carbon from 2019.
• The government is asking the European Commission for tougher targets on car fuel emissions
• Consideration is being given to raising the UK target for emissions cuts to 80% by 2050.
EDUCATION
• There will be �200m extra for schools to raise GCSE results. By 2011, every school "will be an improving school".
• There will be a �30m fund to improve science teaching.
POVERTY
• Child poverty must be eradicated in Britain. Total of 600,000 fewer children in relative poverty and 150,000 fewer children in absolute poverty.
• Five million customers on pre-paid meters should get a "better deal". Energy companies should spend �150m on social tariffs.
• �17 more a week for poor families with one child.
• A family with two children earning up to �28,000 a year will be �130 a year better off. A further �125m to be spent over the next three years to help families.
SAVINGS
• The government will launch the "savings gateway" nationally with the first accounts available by 2010.
• Cash ISA limit confirmed as �3,600 a year from April.
ECONOMY
• Turbulence in global financial markets, starting in the US, has spread across the world - and this poses a major risk to the world economy.
• The British economy will continue to grow. "This Budget is about equipping Britain for the times ahead...about building a fairer society," Mr Darling said.
• Britain is more resilient and more prepared to deal with global shocks.
• The UK's GDP per head has gone from the lowest in the G7 in the 1990s to second highest now.
• The British economy will this year grow from between 1.75% and 2.25%, down from 3% last year.
• "There will be no return to the inflation rates of the early 1990s," Mr Darling said.
• To provide certainty, the chancellor said he is writing to the governor of the Bank of England to keep a 2% target on inflation.
• Borrowing next year will rise to �43bn, some 2.9% of national income. It will fall to 1.3% by 2012/13.
• By 2011, investment will have increased by 500%, trebling as a share of national income.
• Public spending in the coming three years will grow by 2.2% a year.
ARMED FORCES
• Mr Darling said that this year �2bn more will be spent on troops in the frontline, including �900m on military equipment.
PUBLIC SERVICES
• Spending on government departments must be matched by reform.
• The focus for the next decade on the NHS will be creating "world-class services".
NON DOMICILES
• The government welcomes the contribution made by people from outside the UK. But non domiciled families should pay a "reasonable charge" after seven years.
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