Daily Express

Anger at plan to raise £2bn with internet shopping tax

- By Martyn Brown

PLANS to hit internet giants with a sales tax will punish shoppers and do little to help struggling high streets, experts say.

Treasury financial secretary Jesse Norman has said the levy, which could be in the March 3 Budget, may be needed to help pay off the spiralling coronaviru­s debt.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak is also said to be keen on a proposed two per cent charge on all goods bought online in the UK.

It is predicted to initially bring an extra £2billion a year – and that could be accompanie­d by an extra charge on deliveries.

But Tom Clougherty, of the Centre for Policy Studies, said: “Taxing internet sales differentl­y is a terrible idea, especially in the middle of a pandemic when many have no choice but to shop online.

“Even when things get back to normal, if people prefer to shop online rather than in store, that should be up to them. Online shoppers already pay VAT. There’s no good reason for clobbering them with an additional tax.”

Instead, Mr Clougherty said the Government should be reforming business rates, relaxing planning rules and improving local transport. He added: “Simply trying to hobble the competitio­n does no one any favours.”

John O’Connell, of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: “Online orders have been a lockdown lifeline for millions but if an online sales tax is put in place, hardpresse­d shoppers can’t win.

“When people drive to the shops they’re already whacked with fuel duty and parking levies.

The constant war on consumers has got to stop.” Mr Norman has told MPs the Treasury is considerin­g the change and No10 has signalled its openness to the idea. Ministers say it would help save high streets by levelling up competitio­n with online retailers who have lower overheads. A deliveries tax would also help reach environmen­tal targets.

The pandemic has seen online sales soar but internet giants like Amazon have been criticised for paying low levels of UK tax. Last year the Government introduced a digital services tax on large webbased firms such as social media companies and online platforms. But Mike Cherry, of the Federation of Small Businesses, said: “Raising taxes right now would be totally wrong. Small businesses have a mountain to climb to get back on their feet after a tumultuous year. “The Government needs to choose growth over tax rises.”

 ??  ?? ‘Pro-charge’...Chancellor Rishi Sunak
‘Pro-charge’...Chancellor Rishi Sunak
 ??  ?? Online levy may be seen in March Budget
Online levy may be seen in March Budget

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