The Chronicle

Northern Tory MPs call for huge rates cut

-

CONSERVATI­VE MPs in the North of England are calling for a massive cut in taxes paid by shops, as Chancellor Rishi Sunak prepares to present his Budget statement.

Forty-five Northern Tories from “Red Wall” seats have called for a cut in business rates for retailers. They include Bishop Auckland MP Dehenna Davis and Sedgefield MP Paul Howell.

The MPs warn that Northern shops are paying higher business rates than those in the South, as a proportion of their profits. The tax is based on the value of the firm’s property, which means shops can pay similar rates even if turnover and profits are very different.

The letter was co-ordinated by the Northern Research Group, which includes 45 backbench Conservati­ves.

Research conducted by consultant­s WPI Strategy shows that the burden of business rates on shops is highest in constituen­cies that are most in need of “levelling up”, many of which were gained by the Conservati­ve Party in 2019.

They said in a new report: “In these areas, stores face four times the burden of more affluent areas and in certain areas it is much higher – a shop located in Bishop Auckland can face a business rates burden eight times that of a shop in Surrey Heath. This is simply unsustaina­ble.”

In an article written jointly with Leigh MP James Grundy, Ms Davison said: “To those who represent constituen­cies such as ours, the answer could not be clearer: a reduction in business rates could give a huge boost to the levelling up agenda.

“That is why we, along with our colleagues in the Northern Research Group, have written to the chancellor to thank him for the expected extension of the business rates holiday in the budget while urging him to use the business rates review to reduce rates nationally and ensure there is a level playing field between bricks and mortar and online retail.”

The Northern Research Group recently met a group of large and small retailers to discuss pressures on high streets and town centres, and to hear the case for a rebalancin­g of retail taxation between bricks-and-mortar and online retail, to better reflect changing patterns of consumer behaviour which have been accelerate­d during the pandemic.

Mr Sunak is expected to announce a series of tax measures tomorrow.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom