Nearly 50,000 more high street jobs created in Labour held areas
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As Labour ramps up its call on the Government to reform business
rates, new figures from the House of Commons Library show that high
street employment rose by 3% (48,000) in areas continuously
controlled by Labour over 2015-2018, compared to Conservative held
areas where jobs only rose by 1.6%. Non-high street employment also
rose by 377,000 in those same Labour held areas. In
September, Labour’s Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves was praised by
business groups when...Request free
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As Labour ramps up its call on the Government to reform business rates, new figures from the House of Commons Library show that high street employment rose by 3% (48,000) in areas continuously controlled by Labour over 2015-2018, compared to Conservative held areas where jobs only rose by 1.6%. Non-high street employment also rose by 377,000 in those same Labour held areas.
In September, Labour’s Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves was praised by business groups when she pledged the party would cut business rates immediately, and then completely reform the business rates system in the long run, bringing the change which major business groups have been urging the Government to do.
The Party’s plan would incentivise business investment, especially in areas that help decarbonise the economy; reduce uncertainty for business, through more frequent revaluations and through instant reductions in bills when property values fall; reward rather than punish entrepreneurship; and reward local government for the great work they do to promote economic growth.
The news comes as Reeves visits Stockton high street today [Thursday], undergoing reform by the local Labour council into a more modern, enterprising centre and green community space.
That transformation includes converting a previously derelict theatre into a new concert venue that will bring a footfall of 200,000 a year, and breathing new life into an old department store, making it into an Enterprise Arcade, where independent businesses can pay a peppercorn rent as they seek to get off the ground.
Rachel Reeves MP, Labour’s Shadow Chancellor, said:
“Our high streets are a crucial part of the tapestry of where we live, work and share our everyday lives, and they hold the keys to our economic recovery.
“The current system of Business Rates is not fit for purpose – it punishes investment, entrepreneurship and it hits the high street.
“That’s why Labour would cut business rates immediately – paying for this with a one-off rise in the Digital Services Tax.
“And it’s also why we’d scrap the system entirely – replacing it, as many business groups and firms up and down the country have called for: a fundamental reform that makes sure online giants pay their fair share in tax too.
“Labour’s mission is to tax fairly, spend wisely, and grow our economy by boosting our brilliant British businesses and helping high streets be the pride of our towns and cities.”
Ends
Notes to editors
Labour have said the Party will:
o It would always incentivise business investment, especially in those areas that contribute towards decarbonising the economy o It would reduce uncertainty for business, through more frequent revaluations and through instant reductions in bills when property values fall o It would reward rather than punish entrepreneurship, with incentives for businesses that move into empty premises o It would reward local government for the great work they do to promote economic growth, while guaranteeing funding for local public services.
House of Commons Library Research:
*Total includes 4 local authorities for which no party control data is available Note: Figures in brackets indicates number of councils Source: Commons Library calculations based on ONS, High streets in Great Britain: March, 2020 and council data provided in Open Council Data UK data files |
