The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Local businesses reaction to NI changes:

Worries grow at impact of new tax on job creation, wages and prices

- By Paul Grinnell paul.grinnell@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @PTPaulGrin­nell

Business leaders in Peterborou­gh have warned that Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s National Insurance hike could harm the city’s recovery after the Covid-19 pandemic.

Senior industrial­ists have spoken out after Mr Johnson announced a 1.25 per cent increase in National Insurance for employees and employers from next April plus higher tax on dividend income and with working pensioners expected to pay National Insurance for the first time.

The hike, called a Health and Social Care Levy, is expected to generate £36 billion over three years to ease pressures on the NHS and social care sector.

Vic Annells, chief executive of Cambridges­hire Chamber of Commerce, said: “The proposed National Insurance increases will be difficult for businesses at this crucial time of economic recovery.

“It will be a significan­t cost on firms that are already facing other cost pressures as they recover from the pandemic.”

Iain Forsythe, chairman of PKB Trade, in Wainman Road, Peterborou­gh, said: “Customers are likely to face the cost of the rise personally and in the cost of goods they purchase as the National Insurance increase will have to be passed on to make a business sustainabl­e.”

William Burgess, chairman of Burgess Farms, in Yaxley, said: “National Insurance is a tax on jobs.

“This recent move has added 1.25 per cent to our payroll costs which are already going up by about 10 per cent due to a shortage of available people.

“Our margins are tight and our sector currently only makes two to five per cent net margin. So 1.25 per cent is a big chunk out of that margin.

He added: “I believe that the increase will have to be passed on in higher prices and so this will push inflation higher and erode peoples take home pay in real terms.

“It will hamper business in their covid recovery because the loss of real terms income will lead to less demand for goods and services.”

Adrian Posnett, managing director of Oakham Ales, in Maxwell Road, said: “We’ve been hit by a succession of increased costs over the last few months and a rise in the employer NI contributi­on might add quite significan­tly to these.

“We also worry about the effect the increase will have on customers’ disposable income at a time when our industry is still struggling to return to normal levels of business.”

Peterborou­gh MP Paul Bristow said: “The Government stepped in to help our businesses with funding and furlough, protecting jobs.

“Many companies in Peterborou­gh only survived because of this interventi­on.”

He added: “It’s absolutely right for the Government to grasp the nettle and deal with the enormous NHS backlog, while properly funding social care.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Vic Annells, chief executive of Cambridges­hire Chamber of Commerce
Vic Annells, chief executive of Cambridges­hire Chamber of Commerce
 ??  ?? William Burgess, chairman of Burgess Farms
William Burgess, chairman of Burgess Farms
 ??  ?? Iain Forsythe, chairman of PKB Trade
Iain Forsythe, chairman of PKB Trade
 ??  ?? Prime Minister Boris Johnson
Prime Minister Boris Johnson

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