Daily Mirror

Firms ‘giving up tax battle’

Tories blasted as rate appeals plunge

-

86% fall in firms fighting rises

FIRMS fighting business rate rises have plunged by nearly 90% since the Tories changed the appeal system.

The Government was yesterday accused of “choking off ” challenges from small companies crippled by tax increases.

And the appeal registrati­on process is said to be so “tortuous” firms are put off applying for reductions, potentiall­y leaving many paying over the odds.

Official figures have revealed more than 36,300 appeals were lodged by firms in England between April 1 last year – when business premises were revalued – and this June.

That marked an 86% drop from the near 266,900 appeals in the 15 months after the last time business rates were reassessed back in 2010. The collapse coincides with the introducti­on of a new ‘Check, Challenge, Appeal’ system, partly designed to cut down on the number of firms submitting spurious objections. The sharp drop in appeals comes despite around seven in 10 proving successful. The Earl of Lytton, a crossbench peer, told the House of Lords last year the system involved a “most tortuous” registrati­on process. Mike Cherry, national chairman at the Federation of Small Businesses, said yesterday: “The Government must urgently get a grip on the business rates appeals platform, which places a huge administra­tive burden on small firms. Many simply don’t have the time or money to bring together a case using the overly complicate­d system.

“Choking off appeals is not the way to deal with a backlog. The solution is for a radical overhaul of unfair tax that small businesses struggle to navigate when things go wrong.”

The appeal figures come amid reports that the Valuation Office Agency – which decides them – is struggling to cope because of job cuts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom