The Scotsman

Westminste­r’s high street reforms ‘could leave Scotland behind’

● Plans to ‘revolution­ise’ retail south of the Border could prove hard to match

- By JANE BRADLEY Consumer Affairs Correspond­ent

Scottish retail experts have warned that Scotland could be left behind as a UK government committee unveiled a raft of reforms which could revolution­ise the future of the high street south of the border.

A report published today by the housing, communitie­s and local government committee at Westminste­r said that dated policies and an unfair tax regime must be reformed to allow high streets and town centres to flourish in the future and warned that the high street’s main function “primarily as a retail hub” was “at an end”.

Reforms being considered include proposals for an online sales tax to “level the playing field” between internet and traditiona­l retailers and central government funding for local authoritie­s to create detailed plans setting out the future direction of their towns and high streets.

It also said the government should consider a sales tax, an increase in VAT and “green taxes” on deliveries and packaging.

However, Phil Prentice, chief officer of Scotland’s Towns Partnershi­p, said that the reforms could leave England “stealing a march over Scotland”, which has previously been regarded as a pioneer in revolution­ising the high street. He said: “The rates issue is the elephant in the room and needs to be grasped. Any policy needs to be done across the UK. If this went ahead, there would be too much at risk for Scotland to be a lone wolf in all of this.”

Scotland has previously led the way in attempts to transform its town centres, including a wide-ranging report carried out by architect Malcolm Fraser in 2013, which recommende­d bringing non-retail such as leisure and residentia­l buildings back to Scotland’s high streets. A £50 million town centres fund was part of the recent Scottish Budget.

Leigh Sparks, professor of retail at Stirling University, said: “The proposals they are putting forward are all things that Scotland could do. The problem for Scotland is that if England is to put a lot of money into this, their towns and high streets could look more attractive than here.”

In the report, committee chair Clive Betts said: “In recent years, high streets and town centres have faced extremely challengin­g times. We have seen the collapse of a number of well-known, national high street chains, with many more undergoing restructur­ing or being bought out. The growth of online shopping has profoundly changed retail in the UK, and the knock-on impact on high streets has been stark.

“It is likely that the heyday of the high street primarily as a retail hub is at an end. How-

0 MPS are calling for major reform in retail in England, putting Scotland’s high streets under pressure

ever, this need not be its death knell. Local authoritie­s must get to grips with the fact that their town centres need to change; they need to innovate, setting out a long-term strategy for renewal, reconfigur­ing the town centre and finding new ways of using buildings and encouragin­g new independen­t retailers.”

He added: “We must begin a period of renewal and regenerati­on, establishi­ng high

streets as focal points of our communitie­s comprising green space and health, education and leisure services, as well as a core of retail.

At a local and national level, government must create a framework that allows high streets and town centres to thrive. Local authoritie­s must have the foresight to develop evolving strategies tailored to the needs of their local communitie­s and drive the largescale

transforma­tion needed. Central government must give them the powers, and back them financiall­y, to allow them to put this into practice.”

The report said that local authority plans should consider green space, leisure, arts and culture, health and social care services to create space that is the “intersecti­on of human life and activity”.

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