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Rachel clun,
Chris Bramwelland
Emer Moreau
Liam DavidsonThere is a wide spectrum of what to budget and not to include.
Ahead of her speech on Wednesday, Chancellor Rachel Reeves has confirmed two tax cuts and cuts are on the table.
BBC News has been talking to people with a number of adverts about what they want to see in the budget.
If there’s an issue you’d like to see covered, you can voice it through your BBC.

Liam Davidson is a third year student at the University of Aberdeen.
A student loan gives him a monthly income of £800 and he earns £1,000 alongside working out at the gym.
After the important bills, he said he has £200-£250 in income and has noticed food prices continue to rise.
“Last month I was down to about £50 for the month and there was a week left,” she said.
Under-22s in Scotland get free bus travel and lai will be the same scheme extended to all students and the rest of England.
“I’m spending £40 a week on it and from the Union – it’s cheaper to drive,” he says.
Last month, the government said free bus rides for under-22s in England would be “unworkable”.

Wesyche Thorne, 52, and his wife Toni live in Bristol with two of their children.
They would like a bigger house but say stamp duty will add £15,000 to £20,000 to the cost they want in the budget.
Duty is a tax due when you buy property or land over a certain price in the UK and Northern Ireland.
“To me, it seems like a tax that just doesn’t pay to own a house,” Wesyle said.
He hopes the residents will “either go through Pow Parlap Flapticash Scegorkasher (or) just apply to properties at a higher valuation,” he said.
Wesyy and Toni run local stores and market nets, and are members of the Federation of Small Businesses. They currently pay back about £60,000 a year, but the amount can vary.
He said the pressure of the cost has “The sight is not bad”, adding “we are not concentrated from every direction” by skyoke, a number of national minimum buildings in the rise of business.
Now small businesses like Wesley and Toni’s have to register to pay VAT if their taxable income is over £9,000. Wesley wants that threshold to be higher.

Fatauna tehan jaloh is a single mum living in a council estate in north London.
He said he loved his job as a level 4 construction stock supervisor.
He works full-time and his son goes to a £600-a-month boarding school.
It’s one of his biggest expenses, other than the accompanying rent, and he says all expenses continue to go along with “wages”.
Even so, he feels like he’s doing nothing good and thinks the French should raise taxes and spend more on essential services.
“I would certainly be happy to pay more if I knew it would get schools and social housing there would be more,” he said.

Steve Williams is a contractor and his wife is a counselor. They are both self-employed and he estimates they make a combined £150,000 a year.
They live in basingstoke and both drive electric vehicles (EV).
Steve says he will have no problem with the ev tax.
“I started walking, so I had to pay for up, at the end of the day,” he said.
“You can tax the gas car in the pedimbur money per mas too, even though talk that it only rejects the car, which is not fair,” steve said.

Becki Oliver, 34, lives in Bourne, Lincolnshire, with her husband and two children.
He works as a PA in the Housing Agency and says he wants a cidellor to change the rising cost of living.
“We can’t go out for dinner, we can’t treat the kids; our last holiday was our honeymoon – we’ve never been away as a family,” he said.
“I know these things come, but it’s nice to be able to afford the luxury given how hard we are.”
Becki said she was worried about the state of the NHS after having to take her son to hospital.
He said he wants lawmakers to increase funding for the health care system.
“I offer money is not going to be put in the right place,” he said.
“There are a lot of people in this country, and we need to be acknowledged.”

Kat Wimbins lives in Swansea and works for disability wales. His income makes up just under two-thirds of his income and he receives universal credit and personal ideal payments (the pipe).
Kat has ossogenesis to sowerfecti 3, known as bone disease antap, so she faces a better writing when she needs a chair and equipment that she has to criticize.
She spends £70 a month on insurance and food for her assistance dog, Wurdey, and the latest wheelchair service is almost £1,000.
It’s been a tough few months, he says. “Without my pipe, I would have struggled a lot more.”
There is speculation that the budget may include changes to the mortgage scheme that could help people who do not drive leased cars.
Kat said he would urge Reseves “not to mess with motivation” such as cutting the scheme “not going to help people to find everything”.

Goal Bread and his wife Tara Tarka work in administration – Neal in the contact center, and Tara in the hospital.
With a combined income of about £100,000 and having paid off the mortgage on the Bradford home, Neal has no major financial pressures. But at 58, he is concerned about retirement.
“I’m worried now, as I approach the next life, that is when I can afford to retire? Because more things seem to move,” he said.
He doesn’t want his back to “pension touch” by changing the allowance of tax-free amount to plan pension savings.
