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As with every Budget , the devil in Philip Hammond's financial statement is in the detail.

The Chancellor came out with some eye-catching cash injections for the NHS and housing, some welcome tax cuts for small businesses and first-time buyers - and a long-awaited climbdown on Universal Credit.

But once you get past those, 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 88 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. The stamp duty cut will only really help people who already have expensive houses

Stamp Duty will be abolished for all first-time buyers of homes under £300,000.

But the OBR says it will simply feed into rising house prices.

In fact, they reckon that before long, the post-stamp duty price paid by first time buyers is likely to be increase so much they would have been better off just paying the stamp duty.

It adds: “Thus, the main gainers from the policy are people who already own property, not the first-time buyers themselves.”

Some first-time buyers will be able to buy properties they couldn’t otherwise afford, but “more expensively”, the OBR warns.

2. It also costs £900,000 per new first time buyer

According to the OBR projection, the stamp duty cut will encourage a tiny number of people to buy a house - and as a result, the cost for each of them is nearly a million pounds. The rest of it is wasted, because the people who get it would have bought the house anyway.

A million pounds.

As the Resolution Foundation's Torsten Bell points out, it would be much cheaper to literally build them a house each.

3. George Osborne's big surplus is 16 YEARS late

George Osborne once promised grandly that he'd have a budget surplus by 2015.

How laughably ridiculous that looks now.

The Office for Budget Responsibility says even achieving it by the mid-2020s looks challenging.

Instead, on current trends it would be reached in 2030/31. But that would require departmental spending to fall every year in the meantime.

4. We've put aside a mysterious £3.5bn for the EU

Tory Brexiteers raised the alarm after it emerged we've put aside £3.5billion a year for the EU - long after we leave.

Reporters have been told this is just an estimate from the Treasury based on old figures because so much is still unknown about Brexit.

But it could leave the Tories who promised to "take back control" of £350million a week for the NHS looking very stupid indeed.

5. The government STILL won't talk to the OBR about Brexit , and the OBR seem getting increasingly irate about it

In their response to the March budget, the OBR complained that the government weren't giving them enough information about their plans for immigration and trade after Brexit for them to make accurate projections.

They noted that when they did ask Number 10 for more information, they were helpfully pointed to a speech the Prime Minister had made in January.

Well, that hasn't changed, and the OBR sound increasingly miffed about it.

They make the same comment about lack of information from the government about Brexit, noting that this time Downing Street pointed them to the Prime Minister's Florence Speech and a trade policy white paper from February.

They say: "Given the uncertainty regarding how the Government will respond to the choices and tradeoffs it faces during the negotiations, we still have no meaningful basis on which to form a judgement as to their final outcome and upon which we can then condition our forecast."

Ouch.

6. Remember the sugar tax? It's making about half as much money as the Tories said it would and it's coming out of children's pockets

Kids will be getting £220m less for school sports because the tax on sugary drinks is bringing in half of what Ministers thought it would.

The OBR say ministers overestimated the amount of soft drinks being consumed in pubs, restaurants and cafes.

7. Everyone just got at least £70 richer - but the richest get 5 times as much

Tax savings from the changes to the Personal Allowance

Every year since the Coalition came to power, the government have increased the income tax threshold.

This year's increase means you can make up to £11,850 without being liable for income tax, and anyone earning more than the threshold saves at least £70 a year.

She calculated a typical basic rate taxpayer will pay £1,075 less tax in 2018-19 compared to 2010-11.

But the real winners are the better off - with the higher rate threshold - where you start paying 40% tax - rising to £46,350 a year. That saves people earning more than that £270 - on top of the £70 everyone else gets.

8. None of the Universal Credit changes will help people going hungry this Christmas

The Tories’ U-turn on Universal Credit will be too late to stop ANY families being hit this Christmas.

The government is finally cutting the waiting time for first payments under the benefit, from six to five weeks, at a cost of £170m next year.

But there are already less than six weeks left until Christmas - despite charities spending months warning of doom.

And devastating details buried in the Budget small print shows there’s nothing for them until January anyway.

So those already hit by the policy on December 25 can’t get any benefit from today’s announcement until the New Year.

The six-week wait is only being cut to five weeks from February 2018.

Even the expansion of advance payments, from a half-month’s pay to a full month’s, will only happen from January 2018.

And a new rule continuing housing benefit for the first two weeks of a claim, costing £130m next year, only kicks in from April 2018.

9. The price of cigarettes is going up for the second time this year - and it's the biggest increase ever

The price of cigarettes and cigars goes up every year by two percentage points above the rate of inflation. On rolling tobacco it's an extra one percentage point on top of that.

Currently inflation in the UK stands at 2.9% - so the total increase will be 4.9% on a cigarettes and 5.9% on tobacco.

The average price of a pack of 20 cigarettes was £9.91 after the last budget.

Increasing that by a further 4.9% adds 49p to a pack - putting the average price of a pack of 20 up to £10.40.

For a 20 a day smoker, that adds up to an extra £178.85 a year.

And not only is that the biggest increase ever in the tax on tobacco, it's also the second time it's been applied this year.

The March Budget's escalator was introduced in May - and today's rise is on top of that.

10. Freezing fuel duty for the third time costs THREE TIMES as much as the Universal Credit U-turn

Freezing fuel duty for the seventh year in a row - a big win to Tory grassroots - will cost a whopping £830m next year.

Compare that to the Universal Credit U-turn and extra protections, which will cost £300m.

So the government is spending almost three times as much protecting fuel duty that’s already been frozen for years, despite warning the money is tight.

11. A flagship Tory housing pledge still isn't really happening

David Cameron and co vowed in 2015 to expand the Right to Buy to housing associations in a move that prompted anger.

Of course the OBR have pointed out the policy is still flagging two years later.

There’s going to be a second ‘pilot scheme’ in July 2018, but legislation to actually pass the scheme into law is still ‘pending’.

The OBR admitted: “Until these details are specified and the implementation timetable is sufficiently clear, we cannot estimate the effects of this policy.”

12. We're all going to die younger

The OBR has revised up its mortality rate.

And yes, it is as bleak as it sounds, they reckon we're all going to die sooner.

Specifically, they think 26,000 more pensioners will die every year than they did in 2014.

There'll be fewer people claiming pensions - but taken together with an expected drop in the working age population due to slowing immigration, it means a net increase in borrowing of £700m.

13. And migrants are needed to take our jobs

As this reporter points out, Philip Hammond explicitly recommended the OBR's prediction of 600,000 more in work by 2022.

But the OBR says: "Around three-quarters of the projected rise in employment is accounted for by net inward migration."

What happens if there's a huge Brexit crackdown on migration? The short answer is we just don't know.