Click here for the Friday Reading Search, a searchable archive of reading and knowledge resources

Since March 2020, Airmic has been issuing Friday Reading, a curated series of readings and knowledge resources sent by email to Airmic members. The objective of Airmic Friday Reading was initially to keep members informed during the Covid-19 pandemic. Today, Airmic Friday Reading has evolved in scope to include content on a wide range of subjects with each email edition following a theme. This page is a searchable archive of all the readings and knowledge resources that have been shared.

To select multiple categories and/or keywords, use Ctrl+Click (or +Click on a Mac).
BBC, 7th March 2024
A 2p cut to National Insurance, a new tax on vaping and an increase to the salary threshold for claiming child benefit. These were just some of the measures announced by Jeremy Hunt
Categories:
Institute for Government (IfG), 6th March 2024
IfG experts analyse Wednesday's budget announcement.
Categories:
Institute for Fiscal Studies, 6th March 2024
“We’ve learned to expect some degree of smoke and mirrors in the Budget. Today was no different, only on this occasion Mr Hunt decided to tax the smoke and to mirror the Labour party’s tax pledges on non-doms and North Sea oil.”
Categories:
London School of Economics, 6th March 2024
Tax cuts during a pre-election Budget make party-political sense. They ensure some electoral support and create constraints that a new government will find hard to overturn. Tony Blair and Gordon Brown faced a similar predicament during their first term in government. But the economic and geopolitical situation in 2024 is much worse than in 1997, warns Tony Hockley.
Categories:
ITV, 5th March 2024
ITV's Deputy Political Editor Anushka Asthana explains why so many people are talking about a May election. Words by Westminster Producer, Maya Bowles.
Categories:
KPMG
As expected it was largely a Budget aimed at workers and families with National Insurance cuts, changes to the High Income Child Benefit Charge, and an increase to the VAT registration threshold. The non-dom announcement perhaps goes further than expected and the drop in the capital gains tax rate for residential property was a surprise.
Categories: