Daily Mail

Rishi’s axing of duty-free is ludicrous, says fashion boss

- By Francesca Washtell City Correspond­ent

THE boss of fashion brand Kurt Geiger has slammed the Chancellor’s ‘ludicrous’ decision to scrap duty-free shopping, insisting it will drive much-needed foreign income elsewhere.

The decision to end VAT refunds for internatio­nal visitors on goods such as perfume, clothing and electronic­s will be a ‘staggering own goal’, according to the luxury footwear firm’s chief executive Neil Clifford.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak announced the proposed policy change in September – to come into force next year. But he is now facing major opposition after it was estimated the move would lead to 138,000 job losses and cost the economy £3.5billion.

Businesses are considerin­g seeking a judicial review while Heathrow Airport warned the decision could cost tens of thousands of jobs. Kurt Geiger said it could be forced to cut 600 workers.

Mr Clifford said: ‘At a time when UK retail employment needs more support than ever before, it is ludicrous that it is poised to become the only country in Europe not to offer tax-free shopping.’

In a letter to the Chancellor seen by the Mail, he argued that dutyfree shopping should be kept – and even extended to visitors from the European Union who are currently exempt from the scheme. He insisted that scrapping duty-free now ‘completely undermines the Government’s stated aim to build a “global Britain” post-Brexit’.

Mr Clifford said: ‘At a stroke, the UK’s ability to remain competitiv­e with continenta­l Europe will be destroyed, placing us at a needless disadvanta­ge – the last thing our country needs or expects our Government to do.’ He told Mr Sunak: ‘As you know, every country in Europe and most major tourist destinatio­ns worldwide offer taxfree shopping. Britain will become the only country in Europe not to offer it, putting our economy at a significan­t disadvanta­ge.

‘British shoppers visiting any EU country will be able to shop taxfree. Paris, Rome and Berlin must be rubbing their hands with glee.

This decision will deal a tremendous blow to the UK economy at an incredibly difficult and fragile time.’ Mr Clifford said Kurt Geiger relies ‘ heavily’ on the tax-free shopping scheme. It has 57 UK stores and runs concession­s in luxury shops such as Harrods and Selfridges. It sold 67,000 pairs of shoes last week alone.

But this was a 30 per cent drop on last year and the company has already been forced to lay off 400 of its 2,200-strong workforce in 2020. Mr Clifford, who has suspended his £500,000 salary through the coronaviru­s crisis, warned it could have to cut as many as 600 roles if duty-free shopping is axed.

A Treasury spokesman said: ‘Less than ten per cent of non-EU visitors to the UK currently use the VAT Retail Export Scheme. Extending it to EU visitors – at a cost of up to £1.4billion a year – would mean subsidisin­g spending that already happens.’

He stressed: ‘Retailers can still offer VAT-free shopping to overseas visitors who buy items in store and have them sent directly to their overseas addresses.’

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