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UKH warns budget will cause job losses, closures and reduced investment

In a letter to the Chancellor, they warn that the lowering of the threshold at which employer NICs is paid will cause an additional £3.4bn cost to be paid

UKHospitality alongside notable hospitality bosses have warned the chancellor that plans outlined in the autumn budget will cause small business closures, job losses and reduced investment in the sector.

Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UKHospitality, and UKHospitality board members, which includes the bosses of Fuller’s, Stonegate Group and Whitbread, have written to the chancellor, supported by a further 209 hospitality businesses, to outline the impacts the additional £3.4bn in cost facing hospitality in April will have.

They warn that the cost increases will cause small business closures within a year, businesses to reconsider investment plans, jobs to be drastically cut, hours for team members to be reduced and contract caterers to struggle to meet important public sector catering contracts for schools, hospitals and prisons.

The letter says: “The changes to the National Insurance Contributions 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.

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“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.”

The hospitality bosses argued that the further costs would eventually have to be passed on to customers, raising prices by 6-8% and fuelling inflation. Yet, customers won’t be able to face the costs either, and businesses will have to resort to reconsider investment, drastically cut jobs and reduce team members’ hours.

The letter continues: “Without action, many businesses will be forced to reconsider their growth plans, and many smaller venues may be at risk of closure, risking future job creation in communities up and down the country.

“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 use technology to shed jobs.”

In addition, the lowering of the threshold at which employer NICs is paid to £5,000 will bring in thousands of part-time staff that were previously never affected, disproportionately affecting hospitality.

Therefore, the signatories have put forward to the government two measures to mitigate this impact: create a new employer NICs band from £5,000 to £9,100 with a lower rate of 5%, or implement an exemption for lower band taxpayers working fewer than 20 hours per week, targeting support for part-time and lower paid workers.

In the letter they conclude: “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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