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Retailers "face £137m bill increase" after rise in business rates

Lauretta Roberts
16 October 2019

Business groups have urged the Chancellor to scrap business rates increases in the Autumn Budget after it was confirmed they will jump by 1.7% in April.

The business rates increase, based on the Consumer Price Inflation (CPI) figure for September, means embattled retailers face a £137 million increase per year, the British Retail Consortium (BRC) said.

The Chancellor will outline the Government’s financial policy on 6 November, less than a weak after a possible no-deal exit from the EU.

Pubs would shoulder a £12.77 million hike while restaurants and hotels would face increases of £9.71 million and £14.41 million respectively, real estate firm Altus Group said.

Standard business rates in England rose to 50.4p on 1 April for the current financial year.

UK retailers including Tesco have criticised the level of business rates as the UK retail sector continues to face rising cost pressures.

Dominic Curran, property policy adviser at the BRC, said: “The Chancellor must take action on rates in the forthcoming budget and scrap ‘downwards transition’, which takes £1.3 billion from retailers and uses most of it to subsidise rates in other industries.

“Meanwhile, with the retail industry facing store closures and jobs losses, the Government should freeze the impending business rates increase.”

It comes after the Government’s decision to shut down Parliament meant a new law aimed at easing pressure on the struggling high street was scrapped.

The legislation aimed to ensure business rates bills for all commercial premises would be reassessed every three years, rather than the current five-year period.

Alex Probyn, UK president of expert services at Altus Group, said: “The compound effect of annual inflationary rises are completely unsupportive of UK businesses.

“Businesses want and expect the Chancellor to deliver a pro-business Autumn Budget amid these uncertain times and Sajid Javid could do that, in part, by being the first Chancellor in history to scrap the inflationary rise next year.”

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