HC Deb 02 November 1995 vol 265 c425W
Mr. Bayley

To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will estimate the impact on the retail prices index of(a) raising insurance premium tax to 5 per cent., (b) giving a £50 rebate to each electricity customer and (c) raising fuel and tobacco duties by (i) 5 per cent. (ii) 3 per cent. in real terms. [40768]

Mr. Heathcoat-Amory

[holding answer 31 October 1995]: The estimated RPI effects are:

Per cent.
RPI RPI Ex MIPs
Raising insurance premium tax:
to 5 per cent. 0.03 0.03
£50 rebate to each electricity customer1
Raising fuel duties:
by 5 per cent. real (8.9 per cent, nominal) 0.22 0.23
by 3 per cent. real (6.9 per cent, nominal) 0.17 0.18
Raising tobacco duties:
by 5 per cent. real (8.9 per cent, nominal) 0.24 0.25
by 3 per cent. real (6.9 per cent, nominal) 0.18 0.19
1 The size and timing of any effect of a rebate to electricity customers depends on how the rebate is effected. Assuming the rebate qualified as a price reduction for RPI purposes and that the full rebate was made to all households in the same quarter, then the effect of a £50 rebate to all domestic electricity consumers in the United Kingdom would be to reduce the all items RPI by between 1 and 1½ per cent, by the end of the quarter. A one-off rebate would have a temporary effect only; if there were no other changes the index would return to its previous level by the end of the following quarter.