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Chancellor delivers first Autumn Statement

Philip Hammond has delivered his first Autumn Statement as Chancellor - and laid bare the economic gloom facing the nation.

Forecasts revealed sweeping downgrades to UK growth and a sharp rise in Government borrowing, abandoning his predecessor's plan to balance the books by 2020.

Key measures included:

  • Fuel duty freeze, a 30p rise in minimum wage and measures to ease cuts to Universal Credit
  • Income free tax allowance to rise to £12,500 by 2020 with higher tax rate threshold raised to £50,000
  • £23bn investment on innovation and infrastructure over five years
  • £3.7bn total housing spend to build 100,000 new high-demand homes and 40,000 more affordable homes, plus ban on upfront fees charged by letting agents
  • Hammond also abolished the Autumn Statement, saying the main Budget statement will now move from the spring to the autumn

But the impact of Brexit on future public finances has led the Office for Budget Responsibility to forecast a £220bn increase in the national debt by 2020.

This is worse than feared, according to ITV News Political Editor Robert Peston.

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Hammond scraps Autumn in favour of Spring Statement

Chancellor Philip Hammond raised smiles with his announcement of his abolition of the Autumn Statement.

Chancellor Philip Hammond has announced he is abolishing the Autumn Statement and moving the main budget statement outside of the Budget from the spring to the autumn.

"This Autumn Statement will be my last," he told MPs before clarifying he would still return to deliver two major statements as mandated by Parliament.

ITV News Deputy Political Editor Chris Ship responded:

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