The
Labour government of
Tony Blair in 1997 introduced a windfall tax on what were described as "the excess
profits of the privatised
utilities". It followed from their manifesto commitment made during the
1997 general election campaign to impose a "windfall levy" on the privatised utilities. The tax came after 18 years of
Conservative government, which had seen the privatisation of many state-owned assets, at prices which many considered too low. It aimed to "put right the bad deal which customers and taxpayers got from the privatisation of the utilities". The tax produced an estimated one-off income to the government of £5 billion, which was used to fund the
New Deal, a welfare-to-work program that sought to tackle long-term unemployment, as well as providing capital investment for schools and the
University for Industry (Learndirect). The tax was calculated by means of a nine times
P/E ratio, whereby the average post-tax profit in the four years after privatization was multiplied by nine to give the value for the purposes of the tax. The difference between this value and the total market capitalisation based on the company's flotation price was subject to a 23% "windfall tax". The tax was charged to the company and was payable in two instalments on 1 December 1997 and 1 December 1998. The companies affected were those privatized by the
Telecommunications Act 1984, the
Airports Act 1986, the
Gas Act 1986, the
Water Act 1989, the
Electricity Act 1989 (and the Electricity (Northern Ireland) Order 1992) and the
Railways Act 1993. The firms affected were
BAA,
British Energy,
British Gas (later BG plc and Centrica),
British Telecom,
National Power,
Northern Ireland Electricity,
Powergen,
Scottish Hydro,
Scottish Power,
Railtrack, the regional electricity companies and the privatized water and sewerage companies (including such companies now forming part of Hyder,
United Utilities and Scottish Power). == Other proposals ==