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Nigel Lawson was born on 11 March 1932 to a non-Orthodox Jewish family [3] living in Hampstead, London. [4]His father, Ralph Lawson (1904–1982), was the owner of a tea-trading firm in the City of London, while his mother, Joan Elizabeth (née Davis, died 1998), was also from a prosperous family of stockbrokers. [5]
The 1989 United Kingdom budget was delivered by Nigel Lawson, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the House of Commons on 14 March 1989. It was the sixth and final budget to be presented by Lawson during his tenure as Chancellor, and took a much more cautious approach to the UK economy than previous budgets delivered by Lawson.
The 1984 United Kingdom budget was delivered by Nigel Lawson, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the House of Commons on 13 March 1984. It was the first budget to be presented by Lawson, who had been appointed as chancellor after the 1983 general election, and saw him embark on "a radical programme of tax reform".
Nigel Lawson – Chancellor of the Exchequer; Peter Rees – Chief Secretary to the Treasury; Sir Geoffrey Howe – Foreign Secretary; Leon Brittan – Home Secretary; Michael Jopling – Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food; Michael Heseltine – Secretary of State for Defence; Sir Keith Joseph – Secretary of State for Education
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The 1986 United Kingdom budget was delivered by Nigel Lawson, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the House of Commons on 18 March 1986. It was the third budget to be presented by Lawson, and saw the start of a programme of tax cuts initiated under the leadership of Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Lawson set the theme of his ...
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