UKHospitality board members, including Bidfood UK, JD Wetherspoon, Young’s and Stonegate Group, have written to Chancellor Rachel Reeves to outline the impacts the additional £3.4 billion in costs facing hospitality in April will have.
The letter warned that the cost increases will cause:
Signatories put forward two measures to mitigate impacts, including creating a new employer NICs band from £5,000 to £9,100 with a lower rate of 5%, or implementing an exemption for lower band taxpayers working fewer than 20 hours per week. This would target support for part-time and lower paid workers.
The letter, which was supported by over 200 hospitality businesses, read: “The changes to the NICs threshold are not just unsustainable for our businesses, they are regressive in their impact on lower earners and will impact flexible working practices which many older workers and parents rely upon. Unquestionably they will lead to business closures and job losses within a year.
“The threshold change brings many team members into Employer NICs for the first time. We estimate the threshold change may be four times the cost of the new headline rate.”
“We understand that these proposals come at an immediate financial cost… we are absolutely firm in our belief that the lost growth potential which would result from inaction would be substantially more expensive.”
The letter continued: “There is no capacity to pass the costs onto customers. Businesses would be reluctantly forced to raise prices by 6-8%, fuelling inflation, yet could not realistically do so as our customers are at the end of their ability to pay more. Instead, many businesses would have to reconsider investment and drastically cut jobs and reduce the hours of team members.
“We know you are determined to ensure that growth is available to all. Yet this change to NICs does the opposite, balancing the books on the backs of the businesses which provide jobs to all in society, nationwide, while sparing businesses that used technology to shed jobs.
“We therefore ask that you consider measures to protect businesses who employ lower earners. We understand that these proposals come at an immediate financial cost, but we are absolutely firm in our belief that the lost growth potential which would result from inaction would be substantially more expensive, for the economy, for society and for the public finances.”
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