The Budget: How the North East is affected
Chancellor George Osborne will set out £4 billion of spending cuts.
Chancellor George Osborne will set out £4 billion of spending cuts.
The Chancellor has announced that the government wants to re-address the North South divide in the UK economy.
Regional economic disparities have long been a problem, with London and the South East having higher growth than the UK average for decades.
The government is determined to rebalance the economy by building the Northern Powerhouse and the government’s devolution revolution is creating powerful elected mayors, allowing local governments to reduce and retain business rates, and giving local leaders across the country new powers and rewards for driving local growth.
Duty on beer, cider and petrol will be frozen, there'll be a 'sugar tax' on sugary drinks and more money for improving Northern schools.
Ahead of the 2016 Budget, ITV News spoke to people who may be directly affected by changes made in the Chancellor's eighth statement.
In among the hours of debate ahead over the Budget, some words will crop up more often than others. Here's our guide to the key terms.