
East Sussex County Council considering specialist accountants
East Sussex County Council is considering hiring specialist accountants to help it deal with financial difficulties and potentially apply for government support.Councillor Nick Bennett, lead member for resources and climate change, will decide on Tuesday whether to commission a £40,000 review by the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy (CIPFA). The council faces a potential deficit of more than £37m in the 2026/27 financial year.In a report, officers said a CIPFA review would likely be required should the council approach the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) to explore options for Exceptional Financial Support (EFS).
The council has not yet formally agreed to seek EFS, reports the Local Democracy Reporting Service. A council spokesperson said: "CIPFA have been approached to undertake their assurance review early, to provide the council with a report that will support the work that the council may need to undertake with MHCLG."If EFS proves not to be required, or an option, the CIPFA review will provide external assurance as to the actions the council is taking to address the financial challenges the council faces."A CIPFA document says the team would work with the council to draw up an improvement plan after assessment.Officers say the review's findings would also be used to inform the county council's annual budget-setting process.The proposal comes amid some significant financial uncertainty for the council.The report said the upcoming comprehensive spending review and potential changes to grant funding could impact the authority's finances.EFS could help by allowing the council to borrow money to fund everyday services - something councils are not usually allowed to do.Normally, councils can only borrow money for long-term investments, like building schools or buying equipment, not to cover day-to-day costs like wages or energy bills.
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The Sun
43 minutes ago
- The Sun
Cadbury launches new limited edition colour-changing Dairy Milk chocolate bars – and they're perfect for hot weather
CADBURY has unveiled a brand new range of limited-edition Dairy Milk chocolate bars that change colour when chilled – and they're ideal for summer snacking. The new Cadbury Dairy Milk Summer Edition bars and the Iced Latte flavour are hitting shelves across the UK from June 2025, wrapped in cold-activated packaging that transforms in the fridge. 3 Based in Birmingham, the chocolate giant confirmed that the special packs use thermochromic technology to reveal vibrant designs – including deck chairs, umbrellas, kites, and inflatables – when cooled. It's the first time Cadbury has launched a product like this. 'This summer, Cadbury Dairy Milk is reigniting the debate around storing chocolate in the fridge,' said Mara Popa, junior brand manager at Cadbury Dairy Milk. 'Our new Cadbury Dairy Milk Summer Editions range features cold-activated packs, reminding consumers that chocolate is a great snacking option in the warmer weather. 'Additionally, our limited-edition Cadbury Dairy Milk Iced Latte tablet is designed to excite consumers with a brand new flavour crafted for summer. This NPD also features colour changing packaging, highlighting the chilled chocolate trend in a playful way and tapping into the debate.' The cold-reactive wrappers aren't just eye-catching – they're a clever nod to how Brits really eat chocolate. According to Cadbury's research, more than half the nation stores their bars in the fridge, especially during the warmer months. Despite this trend, the brand has advised fans to think twice before chilling their choc. In a post on X (formerly Twitter), a spokesperson warned that the fridge might not always be the best place. 'Chocolate should always be stored in a slightly cool, dry, dark place such as a cupboard or pantry at temperatures less than 21°C to ensure the quality isn't compromised,' they explained. Still, curiosity is high. Shoppers beg Cadbury's to bring back 2005 recipe on iconic bar - as they moan current one 'tastes like candle wax' A whopping 67 per cent of Brits said they're open to trying chilled chocolate, and Cadbury is leaning into that interest with a playful summer twist. All five bars in the Edition range will be available in major retailers nationwide and have a recommended price of £2. However, prices may vary depending on the store. Chocoholics can expect a limited run, so fans might want to snap them up quickly once they appear in shops. The packaging not only changes colour, but also ties in with the look and feel of a traditional British summer – perfect for picnics, beach days, or just a cool treat at home. The launch of the iced latte-flavoured Dairy Milk also adds to Cadbury's growing line-up of coffee-infused treats. The bar combines smooth milk chocolate with a creamy coffee centre and crunchy biscuit bits, designed to satisfy both choc and coffee lovers. Cadbury has already seen success with coffee-flavoured chocolate. The Twirl Iced Latte has popped up in B&M stores in recent weeks, earning rave reviews from fans. Meanwhile, a collab with coffee brand Kenco gave us the chocolate-flavoured mocha – another hit among sweet-toothed sippers. And it's not stopping there. From 2 June, the brand will also roll out a limited-edition Twirl White Dipped bar, combining its famous flaky layers with a coating of smooth white chocolate. A post on Facebook teased the launch, calling it 'unreal, indulgent, smooth, swirly, creamy, melty, new, and mouthwatering.' Earlier this month, fans also spotted a new Cadbury Dairy Milk Balls pack in shops, drawing comparisons to the nostalgic Cadbury Tasters – small, round chocolate treats first launched in 1996. With so many launches lined up and a summer full of colourful, cold-friendly packaging, Cadbury is clearly out to make this season a choc-filled celebration. How to save money on chocolate We all love a bit of chocolate from now and then, but you don't have to break the bank buying your favourite bar. Consumer reporter Sam Walker reveals how to cut costs... Go own brand - if you're not too fussed about flavour and just want to supplant your chocolate cravings, you'll save by going for the supermarket's own brand bars. Shop around - if you've spotted your favourite variety at the supermarket, make sure you check if it's cheaper elsewhere. Websites like let you compare prices on products across all the major chains to see if you're getting the best deal. Look out for yellow stickers - supermarket staff put yellow, and sometimes orange and red, stickers on to products to show they've been reduced. They usually do this if the product is coming to the end of its best-before date or the packaging is slightly damaged. Buy bigger bars - most of the time, but not always, chocolate is cheaper per 100g the larger the bar. So if you've got the appetite, and you were going to buy a hefty amount of chocolate anyway, you might as well go bigger. 3


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Britain must welcome the rich: they will help to support our working class
It should come as no surprise that, over the past few decades, many of the UK's most successful and influential business minds have left the country – a clear and troubling sign of national decline. Over the past 10 years, UK policy toward non-domiciled taxpayers ('non-doms') has lurched from piecemeal tightening under successive Conservative chancellors to outright abolition under the current Labour Government. The result? A record-breaking and alarming exodus of high-spending, high-tax-paying residents, leaving an estimated £7 billion yearly hole in public finances and inflicting huge collateral damage on London's position as Europe's financial centre. The social contract between the rich and the poor is at an all-time low. Public trust in the tax system has been eroded by perceptions that elites play by a different set of rules. In the past, your average Briton saw little to no benefit from the wealthy in their midst. If anything, it created greater division and hostility. Reform UK is determined to change this. We are the party of working people – the party of those with alarm clocks who get up in the morning and work hard, whether they're at the higher end of the financial scale or the lower end. Our approach is different, transparent, and designed to directly benefit the hard-working backbone of this nation. Unlike the opaque financial mechanisms of the past, where wealth seemed to vanish into hidden pots of money that ordinary people couldn't see, Reform UK is committed to doing things differently. We will rebuild the social contract by ensuring that every wealthy individual who wishes to move here makes a tangible contribution to Britain's lowest earners. Our policy is simple: Britain must be a place where success is celebrated, not punished with excessive taxes, crippling energy costs, or punitive inheritance levies. We will actively encourage the return of wealth and talent to the United Kingdom – on the clear condition that those who come here deliver immediate, visible benefits to our workers. Here's how it works: every high-net-worth newcomer (or returning leaver) will pay a £250,000 one-off entry contribution in return for a stable, indefinite remittance-style regime on offshore income and a 20-year inheritance-tax shield. Crucially, 100 per cent of this contribution is hypothecated to Britain's lowest-paid full-time workers, delivered automatically by HMRC as a tax-free cash dividend. This means roughly 2.5 million hard-working Britons – the grafters who keep this country running – will receive an annual cash bonus, sent directly to their bank accounts at the end of the financial year. Thanks to this policy, in a low-uptake scenario with 6,000 cards issued annually, we'll generate a £1.5 billion fund, resulting in a tax-free annual dividend of £600 per worker. In a high-uptake scenario with 10,000 cards, this could deliver a £2.5 billion fund, providing £1,000 per worker. This isn't just a number. It's money in the pockets of those who need it most, from cleaners to nurses to small business owners. Our policy isn't a 'golden visa' or a backdoor to citizenship. It's a one-time flat tax paid by newcomers in exchange for the certainty of a favourable tax status. Individuals will still be liable for all standard UK taxes on UK-sourced income, property and spending, but they won't be taxed on offshore income and gains for the duration of their agreed status. Pay your quarter million pounds upfront, and enjoy UK residency without worldwide taxation hassles. After all, this is still the best country in the world, and many of the world's wealthy want to move here but are deterred by the economic downsides. Unlike the old, indefinite non-dom arrangement under the Tories, which lacked transparency and failed to benefit ordinary people, our solution is immediate, visible and mutually beneficial for both newcomers and the hard-working British worker struggling to make ends meet. Unlike Labour's punitive approach, which drives wealth away, we incentivise the rich to return to Britain. Over the past decade, the number of non-dom taxpayers has plummeted from over 120,000 to fewer than 80,000. The failed approaches of both Labour and the Conservatives have cost this country billions annually. Reform UK's plan will reverse this trend, capturing revenue from global wealth, channelling funds to support the working class, and restoring London as a global powerhouse for business, finance and investment. The driving ambition of Reform UK is to put the lives of everyday British citizens first – and this policy does exactly are the party of working people, and we're building a Britain where wealth and opportunity are shared, not hoarded. By ensuring that every pound contributed by the wealthy goes directly to those who get up early and work hard, we're creating a fairer, stronger and more prosperous nation for all.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Chancellor urged to axe stamp duty on British shares
Rachel Reeves has been urged to scrap the stamp duty on share trading to revive the flagging stock market. Figures from HM Revenue and Customs show the tax raised £4.3billion in the 12 months to the end of May – up 34 per cent on the £3.2billion brought in the previous year. City analysts conceded that the idea of giving up this revenue stream 'might make the Chancellor wince' given the parlous state of the public finances. The Government borrowed another £17.7billion last month alone as it spent far more than it earned in taxes. But experts warned the stamp duty on shares is discouraging investment in UK companies and making London a less attractive place for firms to list. Investors pay a 0.5 per cent levy on the price of UK-listed shares they buy, but the tax does not apply to the purchase of shares in foreign companies. It means a saver who buys £10,000 of shares in FTSE 100 giants such as Rolls-Royce or Marks & Spencer pays £50 in tax, but nothing to make the same investment in New York-listed Amazon or Microsoft. The clamour over the stamp duty comes as a flurry of London-listed companies are snapped up by foreign predators or defect to rival markets such as New York. At the same time, they are not being replaced due to a dearth of new listings through so-called 'initial public offerings' (IPOs). Jonathan Webster-Smith, chief investment officer at Bowmore Asset Management, said: 'The level of stamp duty on shares puts the UK stock market at a huge disadvantage to its key competitors. 'Taxing the turnover of shares saps liquidity and ultimately makes London a less attractive capital market. 'There is a valid concern about the number of UK companies leaving the London Stock Exchange for the US and the low number of IPOs. The Government should urgently address that by removing the stamp duty.' Analysis by City broker Peel Hunt shows 30 London-listed companies worth more than £100m have been targeted by bidders so far this year including food delivery group Deliveroo, microchip specialist Alphawave and scientific equipment maker Spectris. Anxiety over the health of the City intensified when fintech firm Wise announced plans to shift its main stock market listing from London to New York. Charles Hall, head of research at the broker Peel Hunt and a leading campaigner for reforms to stem the outflow, said that if the Chancellor (pictured) cannot abolish the stamp duty, she should at least review it with a view to cutting the rate and extending its scope to include hedge funds and others that do not pay. 'Stamp duty makes the UK uncompetitive in an increasingly global financial market,' he said. 'It makes no sense for ordinary investors to be penalised. The Government should announce a review with a clear focus on reducing the rate and increasing the scope of the tax.'