Industry reacts to Sunak’s summer statement

Register to get 1 more free article
Reveal the article below by registering for our email newsletter.
Want unlimited access? View Plans
Already have an account? Sign in
The hospitality sector has widely welcomed the series of measures announced by the chancellor in his āsummer statementā yesterday, with UKHospitality saying it is āreassuringā that he singled out hospitality and tourism as a āvital partā of the UKās economy.
Yesterday (8 July), along with a £9bn retention scheme that will see companies
paid £1,000 bonus per employee for those they keep on until January on part pay, Rishi Sunak revealed VAT for the hospitality sector in food, accommodation and attractions will be cut from 20% to 5% until 12 January.
In addition, he announced the āEat out to help outā scheme, which will provide everyone with a 50% discount to use in participating restaurants of up to Ā£10 a head and is set to begin in August.
Supporting the announcements, UKHospitality chief executive Kate Nicholls said: āCustomer confidence is key to our sectorās revival and our ability to help Britainās economic recovery. Applying every precaution to provide safe venues will count for nothing if customers are not coming through our doors.
āThis significant VAT cut, heightened ability to retain staff and incentives for consumers to eat out together amount to a huge bonus. We hope that the UK public rightly sees it as a sign that we are ready to welcome them back safely. The future of many businesses and jobs depends on it.ā
Although she warned that it doesnāt mean the sector is āout of the woodsā, and there are still āsignificant challengesā ahead. The biggest of these she explains is the spectre of rent liabilities which many businesses are still facing from their closure period. āWe are going to need Government support on this before too long,ā Nicholls added.
Howard Hastings, managing director of Hastings Hotels said the group is āvery much welcomingā the measures adding it is already updating its rates to encourage visitors. It also revealed it will now open its Europa Hotel earlier than planned on August 1.
He said: āThese measures will go a long way in helping the local economy recover in the coming weeks and months ahead and will hopefully encourage more people to visit restaurants and book a staycation this summer. We hope this will also give an extra incentive to visitors from the UK to book a visit to Northern Ireland this summer as it certainly adds extra value to what we already offer.
āWith the increased demand we hope these measures will generate, we will now re-open the Europa Hotel for accommodation earlier than planned on Saturday 1st August.āā
In addition, The British Beer & Pub Association (BBPA) praised the āfirst step on the road to recoveryā but warned that āmore financial help will be required to help thousands of community pubs where food is not a focus, as well as the nationās 2,000 breweries.ā
The trade association said the sector-specific VAT cut, which it had called for, would be a āhuge boostā for pubs that serve food and offer accommodation, and would also help compensate for an expected long period across Summer and beyond of reduced sales and revenue compared to before lockdown.
It also said the chancellorās āeat out to help outā scheme will āhelp encourageā pub goers back to their local pubs where they offer food. However, for those pubs where revenue is more drinks led, the announcement today āprovides less helpā, the BBPA said.
Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the BBPA, said: āThe pub and brewing sector has huge potential to create thousands of new jobs and employ more people, but to do this it needs to be thriving, not just surviving. This will require more support in the medium term directed at all pubs and brewers so they can help lead with the economic recovery.
āThese measures include a significant cut to beer duty to bring the UK in line with other European countries who pay far less tax on beer, and a fundamental review of the business rates system so that pubs no longer pay an unfair share of them.ā
She added: āSuch measures will ensure our pubs thrive and continue to bring together people from all walks of life as they have done for centuries. We look forward to these measures being announced in the Governmentās planned rebuild phase.ā