Chancellor outlines growth measures at Mini Budget
    
Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng used the 2022 Mini Budget to  announce a series of tax cuts for businesses and individuals.
The Chancellor confirmed that the 1.25% rise in national  insurance contributions (NICs) that came in this year will be reversed from 6  November, while the Health and Social Care Levy has been cancelled.
The planned rise in corporation tax to 25% will be scrapped  and the rate maintained at the current 19%. The basic rate of income tax will  be cut to 19p in April 2023, a year ahead of schedule.
Additionally, the level at which homebuyers will start to  pay Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) in England and Northern Ireland has been doubled  from £125,000 to £250,000. First-time homebuyers will pay no SDLT on homes  worth up to £425,000, up from the previous price of £300,000.
For businesses, Investment Zones will be established across  the UK that benefit from lower taxes and liberalised planning frameworks to  encourage business investment.
The cap on bankers' bonuses, which limited rewards to twice  the salary level, will be axed.
The Chancellor also committed to repealing the off-payroll  legislation. The IR35 reforms, which rolled into the public and private sectors  in 2017 and 2021 respectively, will no longer apply from April 2023 and  responsibility for determining employment status where a personal service  company is used will return to the worker.
Mr Kwarteng said:
'Growth is not as high  as it needs to be, which has made it harder to pay for public services,  requiring taxes to rise. This cycle of stagnation has led to the tax burden  being forecast to reach the highest levels since the late 1940s.
'We are determined to  break that cycle. We need a new approach for a new era focused on growth.'