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More money for schools, the NHS and Universal Credit were among the eye-catching announcements in Philip Hammond's budget speech today.

But as always, the devil's in the detail.

Once you get past the bad jokes, the shiny baubles and the claims that austerity is over - all that's left is the small print.

And guess what? Some of it will leave you and your family worse off.

We've trawled through all 106 pages of the Budget 'Red Book', plus the independent Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR)'s assessment of the measures in it.

Here's a few things you might not have spotted.

1. Britain’s poorest people won’t be any better off

A chart buried in the small print shows how the Budget won’t actually make the poorest 20% any better off.

This diagram shows the cumulative impact of ALL tax, welfare and public service changes since 2015 - a mammoth task.

Look at it - the poorest people are on the left, and they simply flatline in the analysis.

While the richest 10% are taking a hit, it’s middle-class people - those in the top 30% or 40% - who will benefit the most, gaining up to £750 a year.

2. The welfare, housing and justice departments are all being slashed

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Philip Hammond made a big play of pumping more money into defence and the NHS.

But he was a little quieter about yet more swingeing cuts being forced on some of the biggest frontline Whitehall departments.

The Department for Work and Pensions is being expected to cut its budget from £6bn to £5.4bn in 2019/20 (not including benefit payments).

The Ministry of Justice is being cut from £6.3bn to £6bn.

And the housing and communities section of Whitehall is being cut from £2.6bn to £2.3bn.

That’s despite a welfare crisis, a prisons crisis and a housing crisis. Why are they doing this?

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3. That plastic tax will take FOUR YEARS to come in

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Chancellor Philip Hammond claimed he’d become "a world leader in tackling the scourge of plastic littering our planet.”

He might have to do a bit better then.

Not only did he resist any call to tax plastic cups.

His big signature move - a tax on packaging that doesn’t have at least 30% recycled plastic - will only come in April 2022.

He made no mention of the date in his speech - we had to find it in the small print.

Environmental Audit Committee chair Mary Creagh blasted: "This speaks volumes about the Treasury’s priorities.

"As China, Vietnam and Thailand close their doors on Britain’s plastic waste the chancellors response is keep calm and carry on.”

4. The tax on Amazon, Google and Facebook will cost tech giants a ‘pittance’

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According to the OBR forecast Google and other online giants could pay a mere £30m each under Hammond's new tax.

Labour said the figure was “a pittance for these massive international companies”

They said the percentage of tax paid by the big five tech giants had halved since 2013.

The new tax won’t come into force until 2020 at which time the tech giants will start to enjoy a 2% cut in their corporation tax rate.

Tom Watson, shadow Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, said: “The lack of ambition in this announcement is derisory.”

5. … And it raises even less than we thought

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If you thought the £400m raised from the Digital Services Tax didn’t seem like much, then don’t look at the back of the Budget book.

It shows £400m a year is only what it’ll raise in 2022.

Next year it raises…. £5million. And in 2020/21 it only raises £275million.

6. 'Crack cocaine of gambling' stakes will stay above £2 for another year

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Campaigners blasted a six-month delay to cutting stakes on fixed-odds betting terminals (FOBTs) to £2.

The move to slash maximum stakes on the “crack cocaine of gambling” from £100 had been expected to come into force next April.

But the Budget small print revealed the move will not take place until October.

The Campaign for Fairer Gambling said it was “unacceptable”.

Labour’s Carolyn Harris, who chairs Parliament’s cross-party group on FOBTs, was “appalled” at the “wholly unjustifiable” delay.

But a Treasury source said: “It’s clearly a judgement call. This we think strikes the right balance.”

7. The extra money for schools can’t be spent on pens, books and toilet paper

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Hammond announced an extra £400 million for struggling schools to pay for “the little extras” they can’t afford.

Many parents will have breathed a sigh of relief at the news, after getting begging letters from their kids’ teachers, asking for money to pay for such extravagances as pens, books and toilet paper.

But they’ll be disappointed. The money is “capital spending”, ringfenced for building maintenance and purchasing equipment.

That means schools will be allowed to buy iPads with the extra cash, but not pens and paper.

8. The Queen is getting a pay rise

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The Sovereign Grant - the money paid by the government to support the Queen in her royal duties is going up. Again.

Last year the figure was 76.1m - this year it’ll go up to an eye-watering £82.4 million.

The size of the grant is usually 15% of the government’s income from Crown Estates.

But last year she got a 10 year boost to 25% to pay for essential refurbishment of Buckingham Palace.

9. There’s going to be a tax on heated tobacco for the first time

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The government is set to introduce a specific tax on heated tobacco.

The products will be taxed at the same rate as hand rolling tobacco from April 2019.

Note: This article originally stated the tax would also apply to vaping fluid. This is not the case. We are happy to correct the error.

Duty on rolling tobacco amounts to around £7 for the smallest, 30g packs.

10. Tories have finally admitted they’re delaying Universal Credit

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Tory ministers have finally admitted they’re delaying Universal Credit, the small print reveals.

The rollout of the hated six-in-one benefit will officially end in December 2023 - the ninth delay after its last end date of March 2023.

And it may only finish in June 2024, because the Office for Budget Responsibility “assumes” it will take six months longer than the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) says.

Just weeks ago, the DWP was refusing to confirm any delay to the Mirror.

Delaying the rollout will actually save the DWP £1billion - because thanks to a £1.7bn-a-year package of help, it’s now “more expensive than the legacy system would have been”, the OBR declared.

There’s also a suggestion that the money will be saved because, by delaying UC, less will be handed over to claimants in transition payments.

11. No Deal Brexit will have a “severe” hit on the economy...

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The Office For Budget Responsibility admits No Deal Brexit will have a “severe” impact.

“If an agreement is not reached in time, it could have a severe short-term impact on demand and supply in the economy,” it says.

“It is next to impossible to calibrate this sort of scenario because of the lack of precedent.”

Philip Hammond announced another £500million in no-deal Brexit preparations, taking the total to £4.2billion.

The Chancellor boasted of “firepower to intervene” if the economy needs more support in coming months - with £15billion of “headroom” to deploy.

Labour’s Chris Leslie, of the People’s Vote campaign, claimed: “There is no Brexit dividend, only years of extended pain.”

12. … And the Brexit divorce bill will be even higher than thought

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Again, this is one from the independent OBR, not the Budget document itself.

The experts have revised their estimate up from £37.1bn to £38.7bn.

It’s been revised up because of a weaker pound-euro exchange rate, and changes to contribution formulas and timetables.

Note: An earlier version of this article said the divorce bill would be £47bn. It is understood that this is the amount paid to the EU institutions over the next five years.

13. A controversial Tory home buying scheme is being reopened, and it’s costing £9billion

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You’d think a package of help for first-time buyers costing almost £9billion might have been mentioned in the Budget speech.

But nope - you have to delve into the documents to find the Help to Buy equity loan scheme is being reopened for two years from April 2021.

The scheme was previously slammed for helping buyers who were already well-off and allowing a five-year “time bomb” of fees to build up.

This time it will be available only to first-time buyers - correcting a major flaw in the old scheme - but there are still some elements of unfairness.

Londoners will be able to use it to get a home worth £600,000, while in the North East it’s only available on homes worth £186,100.

And the scheme’s enormous cost on its own will attract attention.

And finally - one cut that isn’t even in the small print

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We’ve found this one not in the Budget itself, but the report from the Office for Budget Responsibility.

It says capital spending - long-term one-off hits on building projects and the like - has been cut, and the Treasury hasn’t spelt it out.

The OBR says: “Departmental capital spending has also been cut from 2019-20 onwards, a decision that does not appear on the Treasury’s scorecard of policy measures.”