Scottish Daily Mail

Kurt Geiger: Duty free loss disaster for shops

- By Tom Witherow

THE removal of duty-free shopping will be like a ‘Covid for 2021’ for high street jobs, according to the boss of Kurt Geiger.

Chief executive Neil Clifford called the decision to axe the vAT refunds for foreign tourists a ‘disaster’.

He said Chancellor rishi Sunak’s tax hike would be as big a hit to the UK luxury sector as the virus, which has already led him to shed 700 of his 2,200 staff.

More than 235,000 retail jobs have been lost in 2020, and 20,000 shops permanentl­y closed.

Clifford, who describes himself as a ‘Tory through-and-through’ said he finds the move ‘bewilderin­g’ and called on the Chancellor to reverse the decision.

He even questioned whether the move was made to get France onside during the Brexit negotiatio­ns, such is the advantage it will give Britain’s rivals.

Clifford said: ‘It’s such a disaster. It’s going to cost thousands of jobs, it’s madness. I’ve had a number of Zoom calls with the Treasury and they see it as a London problem. This is levelling down.

‘I’m bewildered why the Government is trying to push this through. Hundreds of thousands of tourists will spend all their money in Paris, it’s absolutely bonkers. We’re handing such a big advantage to Paris and the French.

‘It’s such an own goal from a Government that is meant to be probusines­s and pro- employment. There will be an immediate hit to jobs. This decision would be like a Covid-2021.’

The fashion brand, which counts Gigi Hadid, Emily Blunt and reese Witherspoo­n among its fans, has won plaudits for handing out £2.5m of gift cards and discounts to NHS workers.

Clifford also gave up his entire £500,000 salary while stores were closed in the first lockdown.

It employs 70 staff making shirts in Gloucester­shire, whose jobs could be put at risk by the tax increase. Grocers and other lockdown winners have just handed back in excess of £2bn, which would fund vAT refunds for foreign visitors for more than four years.

Critics have also argued that the Government’s calculatio­ns do not take into account what wealthy tourists spend in hotels, restaurant­s and venues such as theatres.

This month Heathrow said 2,000 retail jobs would be lost at the airport if the Chancellor goes ahead with the ‘tourist tax’. It is already facing a dark 2021 with Terminal 4 shut for at least 12 months due to rock bottom demand.

Heathrow chief executive John Holland-K aye said :‘ recent announceme­nts, such as the tourist tax, could be the final nail in the coffin for struggling businesses that rely on inbound tourists.

‘Brexit was meant to be about taking back control to make the UK more competitiv­e. The tourist tax the Government wants to implement will do just the opposite.’

The airport is challengin­g the Government’s decision in the High Court in a judicial review, which will be heard in February. The move also faces the opposition of more than a dozen Tory MPs.

Baroness Altmann said: ‘I believe the Government has made a serious error of judgment in imposing this measure and hope it will reconsider. Many people will go elsewhere, which means we lose the revenue they spend on other items too.’

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