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June 23, 2010

Broadband Tax for fibre broadband scrapped in emergency Budget

Yesterdays emergency budget by the new Government has finally confirmed that the “broadband tax” that Labour wanted to bring in has been scrapped.

Labours 50p per month broadband tax was to be charged to every phone line in the UK with the money raised used to help fund the roll out of fibre optic broadband across the UK.

The new Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne said:

I am happy to be able to abolish this new duty before it is even introduced.
Instead, we will support private broadband investment, including to rural areas, in part with funding from the digital switchover under-spend within the TV licence fee.

The broadband tax would have cost those with a phone line around £6 per year, with those with more than one telephone lines having to pay for each line they have. Labour figured it would raise between £175m-£200m per year to help fund the roll out of Next Generation fibre broadband, however the Conservatives are going to use the extra money that has been left over from the digital switchover to help fund getting this fibre broadband out into rural areas where it is not financially feasible for companies such as BT to fund the deployment themselves.

It is estimated that there is around £300 million left in the digital switchover fund, with many not believing that this will be enough to make sure all rural ares get broadband.

There will be a slight rise potentially on broadband prices with VAT rising 2.5% up to 20% which is due to come into effect on 4th January 2011.

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April 7, 2010

50p per month broadband tax scrapped

The highly controversial 50p per month broadband tax has been scrapped.

The broadband tax would have been applied to all landline telephones and cost 50p per month (£6 per year) and was expected to help raise around £170m a year to help pay for next generation fibre broadband to rural areas but Labour have scrapped it at the last minute before parliament is dissolved next week ahead of the General Election that is due to take place on May 6th.

It is not financially viable for the likes of BT and Virgin Media to install fibre broadband to some rural areas where they would not make a return on their investment and is the reason that the government wanted to provide funding. There is currently plans that 90% of the UK should have access to superfast broadband (50Mb or above) by 2017.

The Conservatives are apposed to the broadband tax and if they get into power would instead look to use part of the BBC licence fee to help with the funding required for the roll out of broadband to rural areas.

One big sticking point was the fact that the broadband tax would be used to help fund the next generation broadband roll out to rural areas which would account for less than a third of the country yet people all over the country would be forced to pay the tax yet see no benefit themselves from it.
Some households who may have more than one telephone line would be charged on each telephone line they hade, even if it was left unused.

Although the broadband tax has been scrapped for now, if Labour do win the General Election on May 6th then it is likely that they will re-introduce it and get it passed.

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