Daily Mail

Supermarke­t chains to get a £200m business rates cut Shake-up benefits Big Four as High St shops face closure

- By Daniel Martin and Holly Black

BRITAIN’S out- of- town supermarke­ts are in line for a £200million business rate cut – even though small high street stores face closure, according to latest figures.

The largest superstore­s and hypermarke­ts expect a 1.7 per cent reduction when rates are revalued in April.

But smaller high street retailers will be charged an average of 3.7 per cent more, costing them tens of millions of pounds, analysis shows.

Experts said the figures showed the madness of the business rates shakeup when town centres are already being hammered by competitio­n from out-of-town supermarke­ts.

It also emerged last night that superstore­s – most of them operated by the so-called Big Four of Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Asda and Morrisons – had benefited from the decision to delay the shake-up by two years thanks to a fall in the value of out-oftown retail centres.

Had the revaluatio­n been carried out in 2015, their bills might have been £1.3billion higher.

It comes a week after it emerged that Amazon will benefit from business rates cuts despite the fact that the online retailer is also putting the high street under pressure. An analy- sis by rent and rates consultanc­y CVS looked at the largest 2,200 supermarke­ts – those with a floor space of more than 2,500sq metres.

These have seen a fall in property value of 5.7 per cent, which will feed through into a business rate cut of around 1.7 per cent on average.

This is equivalent to £39million a year less in business rates paid – or almost £200million by 2022.

However, for the 400,000 small shops in England and Wales, there has been an 8.5 per cent increase in property values. This will lead to a 3.3 per cent increase in business rates charged, or £124million next year – more than £600million extra in rates over the next five years.

The news will increase pressure on the Chancellor to use next month’s Budget to mitigate the effects of the first revaluatio­n in seven years.

Communitie­s Secretary Sajid Javid, who is responsibl­e for business rates, insists that the system is fair, with most businesses seeing a reduction or a freeze in how much they pay.

But Alan Hawkins, of the British Independen­t Retailers Associatio­n, said: ‘We are hearing horror stories of rates going up 40 per cent. It could put people out of business. The problem is they can’t just shut up shop because they are tied to leases they can’t walk away from.

‘The rates system isn’t working. We need radical reform or the decline of high streets will only continue.’

Ministers are facing a revolt from Tory MPs, peers and business groups over the rates revaluatio­n.

More than 500,000 small firms, including shops, cafes, restaurant­s, nurseries and B&Bs will be hit with increases of up to 300 per cent.

Mike Cherry, of the Federation of Small Businesses, said: ‘The revaluatio­n is only now revealing a mountain of anomalies. Small businesses with premises and low profits are being unfairly targeted, while large firms nearby pay less per square metre.

‘This distortion affects small firms right across the economy.’

However, Sainsbury’s said its rates bill would rise thanks to all the smaller convenienc­e stores it owns.

Chief executive Mike Coupe said: ‘There is an advantage for those without bricks-and-mortar operations, so there’s a strong case for a level playing field in business rates.’

Ministers have adjusted the rateable values of every business property in England and Wales to reflect changes in the property market.

The new rateable value will be used to determine the basis of the tax calculatio­n for rates in April.

CVS chief executive Mark Rigby said: ‘April will serve a hammer blow to shops and pubs.’

‘A hammer blow to shops and pubs’

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