Back to work
Major themes in the Budget were getting people to enter work,  increase their working hours and extend their working lives. These include  numerous proposals detailed below.
Childcare
Working parents in England will  be able to access 30 hours of free childcare per week, for 38 weeks of the  year, from when their child is nine-months old to when they start school.
This will be rolled out in  stages:
    - From April  2024, all working parents of two-year-olds can access 15 hours per week.
- From  September 2024, all working parents of children aged nine months up to  three-years old can access 15 hours per week.
- From  September 2025 all working parents of children aged nine months up to  three-years old can access 30 hours free childcare per week.
Where parents need childcare  for more than 38 weeks a year, they are able to spread their free hours  entitlement over a higher number of weeks.
The government will  substantially uplift the hourly rate paid to providers that deliver the  existing free hours. It will also change the staff-to-child ratios for  two-year-olds, moving from 1:4 to 1:5 and provide start-up grants for new  childminders, including for those who choose to register with a childminder  agency. Childminders who register with Ofsted will receive a start-up grant of  £600, whereas those who register with a childminder agency will receive £1,200.
In addition, parents on  Universal Credit childcare support will receive payment upfront when they are  moving into work or increasing their hours, rather than in arrears. Also, the  Universal Credit childcare cap will increase to £951 for one child (up from  £646) and £1,630 for two children (up from £1,108).
Universal Credit claimants
Changes  include:
    - Increasing  the Administrative Earnings Threshold, the minimum amount a person can earn  without being asked to meet regularly with their Work Coach, from the  equivalent of 15 to 18 hours of earnings at the National Living Wage.
- Expanding  work search requirements.
- Strengthening  the application of the Universal Credit sanctions regime, including additional  training for Jobcentre Work Coaches to ensure they are applying sanctions  effectively, including for claimants who do not look for or take up employment.
- Extending  the Youth Offer until 2028, which will support young people looking for work.
Comment
These    changes are expected to require over 100,000 additional claimants to meet    more regularly with a Work Coach and take active steps to move into work or    increase their earnings.
For disabled  people and those with long-term health conditions
The  government is introducing measures to further help those who are not working  due to long-term sickness but want to, with a focus on cardiovascular disease,  mental health and musculoskeletal conditions as the leading causes.
Employing older workers
Older workers  will be supported to work for longer and to return to work via changes to the  pension rules, access to an enhanced digital midlife MOT and an expansion of  the Jobcentre Plus midlife MOT offer, which provides in-person financial  planning and awareness sessions for Universal Credit claimants aged over 50.
VAT
The VAT  registration and deregistration thresholds will not change for a further period  of two years from 1 April 2024, staying at £85,000 and £83,000 respectively.
Comment
According    to the government, at £85,000, the UK's VAT registration threshold is more    than twice as high as the EU and OECD averages.
Changes to  VAT penalties and interest
The government announced pre-pandemic that it intended to  change the way interest and penalties applied for VAT purposes. After a number  of delays the new rules were implemented for VAT periods starting on or after 1  January 2023. The default surcharge was replaced by new penalties if a VAT  return is submitted late or VAT is paid late. There are also changes to how VAT  interest is calculated. The changes are as follows:
    - VAT  returns submitted late - late submission penalties will work on a points-based  system. For each VAT return submitted late one penalty point will be imposed. Once  a penalty threshold is reached, a £200 penalty will apply, with a further £200  penalty for each subsequent late submission.
- Late  payment of VAT - the rate of penalty will depend on how late the payment is.  However, to give businesses time to get used to the changes, HMRC will not be  charging a first late payment penalty for the first year from 1 January 2023  until 31 December 2023, if the VAT is paid in full within 30 days of the  payment due date.
- How late  payment interest will be charged - for VAT periods starting on or after 1  January 2023, HMRC will charge late payment interest from the day the payment  is overdue to the day the payment is made in full.
- Introduction  of repayment interest - the repayment supplement was withdrawn from 1 January  2023. For VAT accounting periods starting on or after 1 January 2023, HMRC will  pay repayment interest if they are late in making a refund.
Annual Tax on  Enveloped Dwellings
The annual chargeable amounts will be uplifted by inflation for the  2023/24 charging period.
Plastic Packaging Tax
Plastic Packaging Tax was introduced  on 1 April 2022 to encourage the use of recycled plastic in packaging and to  divert plastic away from incineration or landfill. The rate will increase to  £210.82 per tonne for all plastic packaging manufactured in the UK or imported  into the UK on or after 1 April 2023.