The Financial Secretary to the Treasury (Victoria Atkins) I beg to
move, That the Bill be now read a Second time. The House may have
spotted that I am not in as full voice as I normally like to be. I
promise that is not because I have been participating in the
activities that I understand are going on outside in Parliament
Square. I hope the House will understand if I do not take quite the
number of interventions that I generally like to when opening a
debate. I...Request free trial
The Financial Secretary to the Treasury ()
I beg to move, That the Bill be now read a Second time.
The House may have spotted that I am not in as full voice as I
normally like to be. I promise that is not because I have been
participating in the activities that I understand are going on
outside in Parliament Square. I hope the House will understand if
I do not take quite the number of interventions that I generally
like to when opening a debate.
I believe that all of us across the House recognise how important
business rates are to council budgets and the funding of core
services. This year alone, business rates are set to raise more
than £20 billion to fund vital services, from adult and
children’s social care to refuse collection. However, business
owners have raised concerns about the impact of this tax on their
ability to stay competitive. That is why the Government have
delivered and will continue to deliver on our commitment to
reform business rates.
In the autumn statement, we announced substantial immediate
support to help businesses adapt to the 2023 business rates
revaluation. Today, we take another major step forward, turning
our attention towards longer-term reform with the Non-Domestic
Rating Bill. It will ensure a business rates system that is more
flexible, transparent and fair.
Before I set out what the Bill delivers, I remind the House of
the steps we have already taken to improve the business rates
system. From April 2023, we have updated all rateable values for
non-domestic properties, reflecting changes in the property
market. The revaluation ensured a fairer distribution of bills
between online and physical retail. On average, bricks-and-mortar
retailers saw decreases of around 20%, but we did not stop
there.
In the autumn statement, we announced a support package worth
almost £14 billion over the next five years to support
businesses. We have frozen the business rates multiplier this
year—a £9.3 billion tax cut over the next five years—we have
increased the retail, hospitality and leisure relief scheme from
50% to 75%, supporting around 230,000 properties, and we have
removed unpopular downwards caps from the transitional relief
scheme, ensuring that businesses immediately see the benefit of
falling bills.
Turning to the Bill, business owners have been clear that a more
frequent revaluation cycle would be extremely helpful. In place
of the current five-yearly cycle, the Bill will implement a
three-yearly cycle. The most recent revaluation took effect from
this April, so the next will take place in 2026 and it will
happen every three years thereafter. I understand that colleagues
will ask, “Hang on a minute. Why every three years, rather than
annually or every two years?”. The reason is that this single
measure is a significant shake-up of the business rates system.
An initial three-yearly cycle ensures that the Valuation Office
Agency has the capacity to deliver these important reforms. I
reassure the House that we will of course keep the system under
review, with the aim of going even further if we can.
We are implementing a new duty for ratepayers to provide the VOA
with information that supports valuation. That will be submitted
through a new, simple online service. It brings business rates in
line with wider tax practice, and it is a crucial first step
towards going further on the frequency of revaluations in the
future. We will make the valuation process clearer by increasing
the transparency of the VOA’s work. The VOA has already delivered
some improvements, but the Bill will allow it to go even further
and provide more accessible information to ratepayers on how
individual valuations have been reached.
(West Worcestershire)
(Con)
The Minister is speaking about the Valuation Office Agency, which
gave evidence to the Treasury Committee last week. It reassured
us that it was ready for these changes and on track for its
computer system changes. Is that consistent with what she has
been told?
Yes, it is. Indeed, the VOA is very keen to get moving with this
because, while it does a good job under the current system, it
understands the difficulties that less frequent revaluations have
posed for businesses, particularly given recent history with the
pandemic. This is very much part of trying to sew the system
together even more tightly, so that the VOA is able to fulfil its
obligations to ratepayers.
We are going to clarify what sort of changes or events should
lead to changes in rateable values between revaluations, with
reforms to material changes of circumstances. Another key reform
involves rethinking the way that the two multipliers or tax rates
are calculated. We are making the recent practice of uprating the
multipliers by the consumer prices index a permanent feature.
Defaulting to this lower measure of inflation will help
businesses struggling with rising costs. The Bill will also allow
the Government to adjust either multiplier to a rate lower than
inflation, and to prescribe which properties pay the lower or
smaller multiplier, keeping business support adaptable to the
fast-moving fiscal environment.
The key driver for all of these changes is to help businesses
grow, and in so doing we want to remove barriers to investment
and to incentivise growth. We are therefore creating an entirely
new 100% relief for ratepayers making eligible improvements to
their property. They will not face higher bills as a result of
those investments for 12 months. I know that that is something
for which businesses, and indeed colleagues, have been asking for
some time. We will also enshrine in law the 100% relief for
low-carbon heat networks that have their own rates bill. That is
something we recently brought in with the support of local
authorities, and it has been warmly welcomed by the business
community.
The Bill shows that the Government are honouring our promise to
British businesses that we will be there for them no matter what,
so that they can continue to innovate, expand and thrive in a
globally competitive economy. In the last six months, my right
hon. Friend the Chancellor has announced almost £14 billion of
support to the business rates system, and now through the Bill we
are going even further. The Bill creates a modern system that can
adapt to the ebb and flow of market tides. It delivers a fairer
system that provides greater transparency for ratepayers and a
business-friendly system that helps, not hinders, growth and
rewards companies that invest. I commend it to the House.
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
I call the shadow Minister.
5.13pm
(Luton North) (Lab)
There is no getting around it: this has been an incredibly tough
time for businesses across the UK. There was the pandemic, of
course, but before and after it, they have had this Government’s
mismanagement of Brexit to contend with, the Government’s failure
to manage rising energy costs, the highest inflation for a
generation and the unforgivable mess of the Government’s
mini-Budget in October.
With this Bill reaching its Second Reading still inadequate in
many areas, business owners are concerned about what further
challenges await them. While businesses have welcomed some
elements of this legislation, it is clear across the board that
supportive measures such as improvement relief are being
delivered far too late. The most glaring omission from the Bill
continues to be the lack of any substantial improvements to our
outdated, dysfunctional business rates system. Labour is
committed to scrapping business rates root and branch, but the
Government continue to tinker around the edges, buying time with
short-term measures, rather than addressing the depth of the
problems they have caused.
The last thing businesses need is more short-term
sticking-plaster fixes. Maybe they are waiting for a Labour
Government in the next 18 months to come and fix it for good. Our
proposed reforms to business rates are what small and
medium-sized enterprises have spent years lobbying for. All of us
will know a high street that was prosperous 15 years ago and is
now in miserable decline, along with libraries, nurseries and
leisure centres. The Tories’ commitment to austerity policies has
led to the death of a devastating number of high street
businesses. They sat by and watched business after business go
bust and the hearts of our high streets gutted. Office for
National Statistics figures show that, even at the height of the
recession, business deaths under the last Labour Government never
rose above 277,000. In stark contrast, this Tory Government
oversaw a staggering peak of 331,000 business deaths in
2017—years before the pandemic, before the war and any other
factors that they may try to draw on.
While the Tories tread water, Labour has a plan for British
business. We will support entrepreneurs to turn their ideas into
reality. We will ensure that bricks and mortar businesses stay on
our high street by making their tax contributions proportionate.
Labour will make online tech giants finally pay their fair share
of tax—something the Conservatives have never had the will to do.
By raising the digital services tax paid by the likes of Amazon,
we will be able to raise the threshold for small business rates
relief, helping more homegrown small and medium-sized businesses
to thrive in our retail sector. Sadly, among other common-sense
reforms suggested by Labour, the Tories have refused to provide
short-term support through raising the threshold for small
business rates relief this financial year. Our estimates suggest
that raising the threshold to £25,000 would save our high streets
more than £1 billion. Instead, SMEs will continue to wade through
bills and fight for their survival. Corner shops and cash and
carries are essential staples of our neighbourhood and many
families rely on them to meet daily need.
Although some measures in the Bill have been welcomed by small
shop owners, worry continues over the administrative burdens of
meeting the new “duty to notify” requirements. The Association of
Convenience Stores told me that, despite representations to
Ministers, its concerns about clause 13 have not been addressed.
Forcing ratepayers to submit taxpayer reference numbers to the
Valuation Office Agency will create more work for all retailers,
but have a particular impact on convenience store chains. Has the
Minister considered the difficulties facing businesses in that
situation: those that may need to spend more to safely report
sensitive tax information for multiple sites? There are also
valid fears that fines will be incurred through small businesses
not knowing when or what to update the VOA with regarding changes
to their premises. Can the Minister update me on what
consultations the Government are conducting to bring clarity to
that process?
The Shopkeepers’ Campaign rightly notes that the clause allowing
fines for retailers to notify the VOA within 60 days represents a
“stealth tax”. Surely Ministers do not intend to find new ways to
make small businesses worse off. Can they please commit to
reviewing that policy?
Many convenience stores are owned and frequented by first, second
and third generation migrant communities and those on lower
incomes. Have Ministers carried out an equality impact assessment
of the unintended consequences that these costs will have on the
owners and, therefore, their customers? I would be grateful to
know whether any such assessment has also investigated regional
differences in the impact of the Bill. Recent analysis by Savills
estate agents found strong disparity between the new rateable
value for city centre retail units and those in small towns.
Surely the Government are not proposing yet more policy that will
make a mockery of their central promise to level up.
The hospitality sector was at the sharp end of the pandemic
restrictions and slow economic recovery. Most recently, it has
suffered a severe workforce shortage due to post-Brexit
limitations on migrant workers. UKHospitality has joined other
business advocacy groups in questioning the new proposals
regarding expanding the VOA’s remit and powers. What is the
Minister’s response to businesses facing extensive administrative
time and costs to provide the VOA with more information than it
reasonably requires? We welcome the commitment to revaluate rates
more frequently, but every three years is still not enough to
keep up with the sudden changes that businesses can experience
during economic turmoil. A Labour Government will introduce
annual revaluations, delivering the up-to-date monitoring and
support that businesses are crying out for.
As I have raised with the Minister before, there is still no
explanation from the Government on how they will support local
authorities that have the huge task of processing tens of
thousands of new business rate forms. Local authorities, as we
all know and appreciate, are already understaffed and
under-resourced. I do not need to remind the Minister that
councils still do not have a long-term sustainable funding model,
so each year brings more financial insecurity than the last. With
yet another new administrative responsibility dumped on their
desks, how does the Minister expect councils to be able to afford
the time and staffing to adjust? Have the Government conducted
any sort of consultation with local authority leaders to assist
with the burden?
We will not be voting against the Bill today. We know some
improvements have been made and we will work towards further
improvements in the next stages. What will not change between
this version of the Bill and the next is that Labour remains the
party of business. We are committed to ensuring that every
business, every entrepreneur, every high street, every worker and
every customer gets what they need from government to live well
and see our economy thrive in return.
5.20pm
(Hastings and Rye)
(Con)
I would like to focus my remarks on our retail sector. The last
few years have seen an acceleration in shop closures and job
losses. The Centre for Retail Research found that more than
17,000 shops closed in 2022, equivalent to 47 a day and the
highest total in five years. More than 5% of retail staff lost
their jobs last year through insolvencies and store closures
arising from rationalisation.
Retail, especially independent shops, is hugely important in
beautiful Hastings and Rye, where over 30% of the local economy
depends on the hospitality and tourism sectors. I know many local
outlets have ceased to trade, and the town centre in Hastings is
punctuated with empty or shuttered shop windows. Even key areas
such as Robertson Street, which has seen something of a revival
since the pandemic, now has prominent outlets closed and empty.
Sadly, some businesses we lost were Hastings institutions, such
as the fishmongers in Queens Arcade, which had been there for
more than half a century. Others include the large Argos near
Breeds Place, which remained empty for several years prior to the
pandemic, and big names such as Game, in Priory Meadow. Several
cafés across the town have also closed.
It would be unfair to say that all those business closures relate
to the business rates system. Some are due to an increase in
rent, on top of the increase in supply chain and energy costs
caused by the pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, but I
have no doubt that business rates is a significant contributory
factor to many business closures across the country. The business
rates system has become disconnected from the realities of modern
retail and retail real estate, which is why I am pleased the
Government have decided to modernise it.
There are several positive measures in the Bill which will help
our retail sector. A more frequent cycle of three years for
revaluations will allow changes in economic conditions to feed
through more rapidly into businesses’ liabilities. As long-term
changes in the economy continue to manifest, accelerated by the
aftermath of the pandemic, that will ensure the business rates
system is more agile and responsive to change, while also
improving fairness for ratepayers. However, it has been argued
that annual revaluations would be most ideal, ensuring a highly
responsive and up-to-date system. Perhaps the Minister can
explain a bit more about that in her response.
The digitalising business rates project will, I hope, modernise
the business rates system, improve the targeting of rates relief,
generate better data for central Government and local government
and help to improve business rates compliance. Measures to
support de-carbonisation and investment, including a relief for
low-carbon heat networks and a new improvement relief, will
ensure that, from April 2024, ratepayers will not see an increase
in their rates bill for 12 months from qualifying improvements
made to their property. That is important because businesses that
improve their properties should not be penalised for it.
However, I have some concerns that the Bill does not go far
enough to help small businesses. The move to the three-yearly
valuations has a cost to the ratepayer. The Valuation Office
Agency has imposed a corresponding duty to notify, which requires
ratepayers to inform it of any changes made to a property within
60 days of the change. This new duty represents a significant
administrative burden for businesses, particularly the small
ones. Whenever a change is made to the property, the occupier
must inform the VOA within 60 days, or be met, it seems, with
punitive fines.
The VOA’s job is to determine a property’s rateable value. It
appears that the imposition of the new duty is simply the VOA
asking the ratepayer to do its job for it. Many small businesses
will struggle with that additional burden. Perhaps most
concerning is the lack of a corresponding duty for the VOA to
respond to ratepayers’ requests. Although the ratepayer must
notify the VOA within 60 days—with the threat of financial
sanctions—the VOA may respond to the ratepayer at its leisure.
That hardly seems fair.
I am concerned that the uniform business rate multiplier has
risen to 51p, which is a significant increase from the 43p that
it stood at on its introduction in 1990—admittedly, that is quite
a long time ago. Although freezing the UBR is welcome, it is
temporary and contrary to our promise in the 2019 Conservative
manifesto to cut the burden of tax on businesses by reducing
business rates. The Bill means there may be annual increases in
the UBR by linking it to the consumer prices index. I would be
grateful if the Minister could explain a bit more about that. We
need to keep in mind that in 2019 voters were promised reduced
business rates bills on SMEs. Can the Minister outline what has
been done to lower the UBR? Can she explain how linking the UBR
to inflation through the consumer prices index will help to
reduce the tax burden on businesses?
Overall, the Bill is welcome as a positive step in the right
direction. We must do all we can to protect our retail sector.
The Conservative party is always the party for small businesses.
I would like a business rates system that flexes with profit
rather than one based on the value of a property—that would be
fairer.
5.27pm
(North Shropshire) (LD)
I have been looking forward to this legislation, partly because I
am passionate about any measures that will revive the fortunes of
the high street in North Shropshire’s historic and beautiful
market towns, and partly because, from my previous role as an
accountant and financial controller, I have first-hand experience
of dealing with the business rates system.
Businesses are facing tough conditions. Every ingredient, nut and
bolt and widget purchased is more expensive. Many businesses are
finding it impossible to pass on those additional costs to
consumers. On top of that, energy costs have been historically
high. Many businesses were forced to sign up to fixed-price
energy contracts when prices were stratospheric. The Government
left those businesses facing a cliff edge when support was
withdrawn at the beginning of this month. Many pubs, cafés and
restaurants have seen a 90% cut in Government help. In my
constituency, they are reporting to me that they are looking at
closure. Businesses have it really tough right now and they need
a break. They need a Government who will
“cut the burden of tax on business by reducing business rates…via
a fundamental review of the system.”
Those are not my words but the commitment that the Conservatives
made in their 2019 manifesto.
The Bill before us today is a disappointment. It tinkers around
the edge of an outdated tax that does not work for the modern
economy. Our high street shops are competing with online
retailers that do not have the same overheads as the physical
shops that form the backbone of our communities’ common spaces.
Business rates increase those costs further, making it even
harder to compete. The Treasury Committee’s 2019 report, “Impact
of business rates on business” confirmed that view.
In market towns such as Oswestry in my constituency, the smaller
independent stores benefit from small business rates relief. They
are not paying anything, so more frequent revaluations will not
help them because they pay nothing in the first place. The
opportunity was to make the difference for the larger
retailers—the anchor tenants and the drivers of footfall that are
needed to bring people back to town centres in person. I think
that opportunity has been missed.
Turning to the detail of the Bill, there are some steps in the
right direction. The increase in the frequency of revaluations,
from every five years to every three years, is clearly welcome.
It is also right to enable businesses to use business rates
improvement relief to encourage businesses to improve and upgrade
their properties. We would hope that the relief might encourage
businesses to look towards ways in which they can embrace
decarbonisation.
It also seems sensible to link business rates to a unique
taxpayer reference. The provisions around notification of
completion of works look to be a welcome measure to reduce the
possibility of fraud in relation to buildings being removed from
the rating list while being refurbished. From experience, that
struck me as a potential weak spot for fraud, so that measure is
welcome.
However, I want to expand on the onerous nature of placing a
responsibility on businesses to keep the Valuation Office Agency
informed about market value and changes to the lease or
ownership. Businesses already receive a notification to inform
the Valuation Office Agency when something material changes at a
premises—primarily, ownership or the registration of a lease—and
they must provide detailed information to confirm that the rating
value is still appropriate. Moving to an annual notification,
even in the event of no change, would mean yet another form to
fill in for the beleaguered financial controller, with whom I
have huge sympathy, who is already bogged down in seemingly
endless monthly and quarterly ONS returns, on top of their
monthly and quarterly financial reporting requirements. It is
estimated that around 700,000 small businesses that currently do
not pay rates at all will be included in this annual form-filling
exercise, with significant penalties in place if they get it
wrong.
Speaking from my own experience, the VOA is not quick to decide
and respond when changes are notified. I spent a year persuading
the VOA to put a new office building on the rating register and
to record other alternations to a mixed-use site, including
inviting the officers on a personal visit to assess the site at
first hand. This was after the pandemic restrictions had been
removed. Changes in case manager, records lost, confusion, and
lack of interaction between the valuation for business rates and
council tax meant that it was an administrative nightmare, as
well as a business planning nightmare.
Businesses need to know what their rates liability is going to
be. Cash-flow planning is critical to staying afloat,
particularly at a time when businesses are struggling with
soaring energy costs and rocketing inflation. Businesses cannot
do that if they do not know what their rates bill will be; we
should remember that the rates bill is backdated to the point
circumstances change, not to the point that the Valuation Office
Agency makes its decision.
I am extremely nervous about imposing a further administrative
burden on small and medium-sized businesses, complete with harsh
fines and penalties, when there is no acknowledgement of the
importance of a swift response from the VOA. Surely some
timetable could be put in place, at least for interim
assessments, to help businesses to plan. I would be grateful if
the Minister could consider corresponding reliefs or an appeals
system, with remedies provided, when the VOA has taken an
unreasonable amount of time to reach a decision, or got its
decision wrong or in a state that requires challenge.
The current business rates system is broken. The Federation of
Small Businesses said:
“these changes do not amount to the fundamental overhaul the
system needs, to reduce the chilling impact of a regressive tax
that you pay before even earning a penny in turnover, let alone
profit.”
Fundamentally, Liberal Democrats disagree with business rates.
They are harmful to high streets and our wider economy, and the
current framework is a huge burden for small businesses. They tax
productive business investment in structures and equipment,
rather than taxing profits and land value.
The Liberal Democrats would abolish the broken business rates
system and replace it with a commercial landowner levy. That levy
would be paid initially by the landlords of commercial
properties, not the businesses occupying them, and it would
feature annual revaluations, which Netherlands has proved are
possible administratively. It would tax only the land value of
commercial sites, not productive investment. Removing buildings,
utilities and other physical capital from taxation would boost
business investment, in turn increasing productivity and
wages.
Liberal Democrat plans would improve our high streets by boosting
investment and helping shops that struggle. None of that will be
achieved by today’s Bill.
5.33pm
(Waveney) (Con)
The Bill is welcome as it was a 2019 Conservative manifesto
commitment to carry out a fundamental review of business rates,
the final report for which was published alongside the 2021
autumn Budget.
I support the Bill generally, but I have two concerns. First, the
Bill should be seen not as the endgame but as the start of the
process to radically reform business rates. The ultimate
objective should be to reduce the uniform business rate
multiplier to something in the order of 30p in the pound; to
carry out annual revaluations; to abolish the multitude of
complicated reliefs; and to digitalise the Valuation Office
Agency. If we do so, business rates will be reduced to an
affordable level, the system will be put on a long-term and more
easily understood footing and we shall be able to get on with
so-called levelling up—removing barriers that impede regional
growth. That will enable businesses to know where they stand and
to make long-term investment decisions. The message I continually
get from the Suffolk Chamber of Commerce, which carries out
quarterly economic surveys, is that the No. 1 concern for
businesses in Suffolk is always business rates.
My second worry is that the Bill will increase rather than ease
the bureaucratic and administrative burden on businesses. I urge
the Government to introduce amendments to prevent that. I shall
set out my concerns in more detail later.
Before I came to this place, I was a chartered surveyor; I did
not specialise in business rates, but I carried out appeals from
time to time. Business rates are a tax with certain inherent
advantages for the Treasury: they yield approximately £25 billion
per annum, they are relatively easy to collect and they are
difficult to avoid. However, if the system is not administered
properly, they can have a significant negative impact on
businesses generally, on specific sectors—we have heard about the
challenges facing hospitality and retail—and on local
economies.
Business rates are in effect a tax on existence rather than on
profitability, so it is important that they be kept as low as
possible. High business rates not only discourage occupation, but
disincentivise investment in innovation, improvement and
expansion—and if you will forgive a quick commercial interlude
while I am on that subject, Madam Deputy Speaker, I must
congratulate PCE Automation of Beccles, which has just received
the King’s award for enterprise in recognition of excellence in
innovation.
At a time of high inflation, high utility costs and stubbornly
high rents, business rates are a fixed cost that occupiers cannot
escape. The Chancellor made some significant and welcome
announcements in his autumn statement, including the revaluation
that is now coming into effect, the reform of the transitional
relief scheme and the freezing of the uniform business rates
multiplier. The Bill provides the necessary legislative framework
for some of those changes and for others that arise from the
Government’s review, as well as making some minor legislative
adjustments and correcting some anomalies. I shall not go through
the Bill’s provisions in detail at this stage, but I repeat that
I applaud the Chancellor for the undertakings that he made in
November, which are much needed in these challenging times. As I
say, however, the Bill must be seen as the start, not the
conclusion, of the process of radical reform.
It is also necessary to guard against some unintended
consequences. As drafted, the Bill will add to the regulatory
burden on businesses at a time when we should be seeking to ease
and reduce it. The new duty to notify set out in clause 13, which
the VOA has justified as necessary to facilitate the move to a
review every three years, will result in a mountain of paperwork
for ratepayers. Businesses will now have to notify the VOA of any
changes to their properties within 60 days, or find themselves
facing punitive fines or even imprisonment. It is not right for
us to expect businesses which are already facing an
extraordinarily challenging regulatory environment to put up with
that.
This obligation was formerly the VOA’s, but has now been
transferred to the ratepayer. The VOA has no corresponding
obligation, and is able to respond to requests for information at
its leisure. Ideally, the duty to notify should be removed from
the Bill in its entirety, but if the Government wish to impose
this new duty, they must do so with the principle of
reciprocation in mind. The VOA must have a corresponding duty to
respond within 60 days, giving the ratepayers rebates on their
business rates bills equivalent to the penalties imposed on them
if there is a failure to respond within that time.
My second concern relates to clause 14, which proposes changes in
the circumstances in which rateable values may be altered outside
the regular cycle of revaluations. I am concerned about the
consequences of this clause, and I believe that it should be
removed. Let me explain the background. A “material change in
circumstances” allows ratepayers recourse to pursue relief on
their business rates bills when factors outside their control
have an impact on their ability to do business and to operate. To
my mind, that is logical natural justice, but the VOA seems to
dislike the paperwork associated with these claims, as is
evidenced by its mass rejection of 400,000 covid-related appeals.
It appears that to prevent the repetition of such circumstances,
it is now proposed to exempt any Government legislation as
qualifying grounds for a challenge. In practice, this means that
the Government would be able to act with impunity and enact
policies that could hamper businesses without allowing them the
legal recourse to challenge them. That is fundamentally
unjust.
As I have mentioned, the move to three-yearly revaluations should
not be the endgame, but should be a stepping stone towards annual
revaluations. The advantage of that approach is that there would
no longer be a need for the current complex system of reliefs;
businesses would in effect be paying a tax that moved with the
market, and that would lead to greater long-term certainty which
would then encourage private sector investment. At first glance,
annual revaluations might seem too complicated and challenging,
but, as we have heard, such a system operates in the Netherlands,
and there is no reason why we should not have it here.
It is regrettable that, for many businesses, discussions and
negotiations with the VOA are conducted in accordance with the
philosophy of “one rule for us and another for them”. The
proposed duty to notify embeds this sentiment still further. It
must be removed, and the system must become more transparent. The
VOA’s processes are notoriously opaque, and leave many ratepayers
scratching their heads when they receive their revaluation
figures. As it stands, a business’s only recourse when it comes
to understanding its rateable value is to go through the VOA’s
complex “check, challenge and appeal” process, which many feel is
deliberately designed to discourage people from—dare I say
it—peering behind the curtain.
The Bill, as currently drafted, does provide the VOA with the
power to give more information to ratepayers, but only at its
discretion, if it considers it “reasonable to do so”. This
provision is set out in clause 10, but it is vague and undefined,
and some might say that it provides the VOA with the ability to
reveal information to no one while appearing to be forthcoming.
If clause 13 requires businesses to provide reams of information
to the VOA, it is only right that it should reciprocate.
Ratepayers must be given the option to understand the process
that defines the tax that they will be paying for the next three
years, and to reasonably expect an answer within 60 days of
submitting their request, thereby mirroring the duty to
notify.
My final concern relates to another unintended consequence of the
duty to notify, as currently drafted in the Bill, which is the
wave of predatory, unqualified and unscrupulous rating advisers
that I fear it may spawn. The ramifications of financial advice,
whether good or bad, can be huge for individuals and businesses.
Most financial advisers in most settings require a licence to
give advice from a sanctioning body. One therefore has to ask why
this does not also apply to rating advisers.
The hon. Gentleman is making an excellent speech. On his point
about advice, financial controllers are inundated daily by people
cold calling them and offering to challenge their rates bills.
They have no idea who they are, yet they take a cut of any saving
that might be made. This indicates two things to me: first, that
the system is not fit for purpose; and secondly, that the rating
values are inadequate in the first place. Does he agree with me
on those points?
I agree with the hon. Lady. This is a specialist area of
valuation. When I was practising as a chartered surveyor, I quite
often got called in because the client, the business owner, had
gone down the line of paying money upfront to someone who had
sent them a circular—they may have paid them £1,000 or £2,000—and
that person had suddenly disappeared. I often got called in to
try to sort out that type of situation.
At the current time, with the publication of the new rating list,
thousands of businesses are being flooded by solicitations from
charlatan rating advisers who are taking advantage of the
confusion created by the complicated rating system. There is a
significant risk that many businesses, particularly SMEs, will
have neither the understanding nor the capacity to meet the duty
to notify. They will increasingly fall prey to such bad advice,
and this could have a devastating impact. The Government should
therefore consider some sort of licensing to protect businesses
from the scourge of cowboys looking to take advantage of the duty
to notify.
Madam Deputy Speaker, you will be pleased to hear that I have now
reached my conclusion. Taking into account that we have been
awaiting legislation on the reform of business rates for the
whole of the 13 years that I have been an MP, this legislation is
indeed welcome. For too long we have been carrying out reviews
and searching for holy grail solutions that involve the abolition
of business rates, but my personal view is that those do not
exist. As I have said, the Chancellor should be commended for the
positive announcements he made in his autumn statement, some of
which are included in this Bill. The Bill should be viewed as a
step in the right direction. However, as currently drafted, it
contains a number of false steps that are likely to have
unintended consequences. It is also vital to recognise that this
is not the end of the reform of business rates, but it is the end
of the beginning. I am happy to support the Bill this afternoon,
but it has defects that need to be addressed as it progresses
through this and the other place, and I hope that the Government
will take on board the concerns that I and my colleagues across
the Chamber have highlighted.
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
I call the shadow Minister.
5.49pm
(Ealing North) (Lab/Co-op)
As we have heard today, this Bill makes a number of changes to
the system of business rates, with most of these changes arising
from the Government’s business rates review, which was first
announced in March 2020. My colleagues and I will not oppose the
Bill today, as any support it offers to businesses is welcome.
However, as we know, some business organisations are concerned
that the Bill will increase the overall administrative burden on
businesses, and I will address that point in a moment.
First, it is worth putting this package of measures in the
context of Government promises on businesses rates in recent
years. The review that led to many of these measures was first
launched by the Prime Minister when he was Chancellor at the
Budget of March 2020. He called this project a
“fundamental review…of the long-term future of business
rates.”—[Official Report, 11 March 2020; Vol. 673, c. 281.]
When the final report was published alongside the autumn Budget
of October 2021, however, the verdict was clear. As the British
Retail Consortium concluded at the time, it
“falls far short of the truly fundamental reform that is needed
and was promised in the government’s 2019 manifesto.”
The truth is that the changes before us, now more than three
years in the making, miss the opportunity to begin replacing the
current system of business rates with one that understands the
needs of British businesses and that is fit for the modern
day.
What is more, right now, we know that many smaller businesses,
particularly those on high streets, that are already struggling
after the pandemic and a difficult winter of high energy bills
are worried about the impact of the current revaluation, which is
why we called for an immediate cut in business rates for small
firms this year by raising the threshold for small business rates
relief in 2023-24. This would be funded by an increase in the
rate of the digital services tax that is charged on the global
revenues of global tech giants. We were disappointed that the
Government failed to adopt our plans, although we welcome their
having heeded our call to ensure that firms are immediately given
any discount they are owed through the current revaluation,
thanks to the Bill’s changes to transitional relief.
It is clear, however, that businesses need a Government who are
ready to go further. In the Government’s own press release on the
Bill, a quote from the British Retail Consortium’s chief
executive makes it clear that
“the job is not done.”
That is, of course, right, and members of the Government may well
accept that the job is not done but, after 13 years in power, how
much longer can Conservative Members get away with the excuse
that they have not yet got round to the urgent and fundamental
reforms our country needs?
We know that fundamental reform is needed, which is why Labour
has said that if we win the next general election, we will
replace the business rates system with one that shifts the burden
of tax away from the high street and on to online giants, that
moves towards annual revaluations and that truly supports
entrepreneurship. Businesses across the country want the
Government to transform the system of business rates to meet the
needs of the modern economy, which is what Labour will do in
power.
There are measures in the Bill that we hope will give at least
some support to struggling businesses. As I mentioned, we have
been calling on the Government to remove downward caps on
transitional relief, so we welcome the measures in the Bill to
make that so. We are also glad to see the revaluation cycle being
moved to every three years, rather than every five years,
although we are concerned that the Government have kicked the
prospect of annual revaluations far into the long grass.
The importance of annual revaluations was, again, made clear in
the Government’s own press release on the Bill, in a quote from
the chief executive of the British Property Federation, who made
it clear that her organisation
“would like to see Government continuing to strive towards even
more frequent revaluations in due course.”
We are therefore concerned that, in the final report of the
business rates review, the Government said only that they
will
“consider the case for…annual revaluations…in the
longer-term.”
We do not have to read between the lines very hard to conclude
that annual revaluations are off the table under this
Government.
Furthermore, alongside the reservations that many businesses and
their representative bodies hold about how the Government’s
reforms do not go far enough, we know that others, such as the
Shopkeepers’ Campaign, have raised important concerns that the
Bill will increase the overall administrative burden on
businesses. As we have heard, the Bill introduces a new legal
duty on business rate payers to provide annual confirmation of
the information held on their property and to inform the
Valuation Office Agency of any changes made to the property
within 60 days of the change or face a fine.
The new requirements will have an impact on business rate payers
and on the billing authorities—indeed, the impacts are referred
to in the information and impact note on the new duty, published
by the Treasury and the VOA. I wish to press the Minister on two
points in particular on the impact of the new duty. First, the
note makes it clear that the average annual cost for each
ratepayer will more than double as a result of the new duty and
that in the first year the cost for each ratepayer of complying
with the new system will be more than three times that of doing
so under the current system. Will he confirm whether that is
correct? The note goes on to accept that the 309 billing
authorities in England with responsibility for business rates
will be impacted by the measures too, but it says that the
“costs are yet to be quantified.”
Will the Minister confirm when the Government will publish the
detail of what those costs are? I look forward to hearing his
response to those points in his closing remarks.
As my hon. Friend the Member for Luton North (), the shadow local government
Minister, and I have made clear, we will not be opposing this
Bill today. However, although any support for businesses that are
struggling may be welcome, it is clear that promises of
fundamental reform of the business rates system under this
Government are gone. As businesses and their representative
bodies have been making clear, even as we debate the Bill, much
more needs to be done. Yet it is also clear that after 13 years
of economic failure, and with a party now chronically divided by
infighting, the Conservatives are incapable of delivering the
reform that businesses need. Our country needs a new Government,
who are ready to replace business rates with a system fit for the
future, ready to work hand in hand with British businesses to
succeed, and ready to get our economy growing in every part of
the country, making everyone better off.
5.56pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities ()
It is a pleasure to close this short but constructive debate on
the future of the business rates system. As we have heard, our
consumer habits are changing faster than ever before and with
that come challenges for high-street businesses. The Government
have conducted a review of business rates, as promised, and now,
through this Bill, we will continue to reform them to better meet
the needs of our economy, while sustaining vital taxpayer subsidy
for local government.
In the time available, I wish to address some of today’s
contributions. I was grateful for the comments of my hon. Friend
the Member for Hastings and Rye (), who raised the important
issue of smaller businesses and those in the hospitality and
retail sector. I know, as do many of us across the Chamber, that
there have been challenges in the past few years. I have seen
that in my constituency, as will every Member in their
constituency. That is precisely why the combination of what the
Government have outlined in the autumn statement and in this Bill
seeks to support businesses that are smaller or in those sectors,
along with a wider group of businesses from across the economy.
We are talking about 75% relief for retail, hospitality and
leisure businesses; the removal of downward caps so that there is
immediate relief when business rates reduce; and more than £14
billion-worth of relief. I hope that that goes some way to
assuaging her concern.
My hon. Friend also rightly raised the issue of annualised
revaluations, as did my hon. Friend the Member for Waveney
(), the Opposition
Front-Benchers and the hon. Member for North Shropshire (). As the Financial Secretary
to the Treasury, my hon. Friend the Member for Louth and
Horncastle (), outlined when opening
the debate, we absolutely want to see more frequent revaluations.
That is exactly why we have brought forward the proposals to move
from a five-year revaluation cycle to a three-year one. We think
that is a big step forward in making business rates more
effective and closer to the businesses that pay them. We also
recognise that this will take time and we need to do it in steps.
As has been outlined by colleagues, we will continue to look at
it and we hope we will be able to make further progress in the
years ahead. The British Retail Consortium was mentioned in a
number of speeches. Organisations such as the BRC have welcomed
this approach, and I hope that Members from across the House will
welcome the move to a three-year revaluation cycle.
Hon. Members have raised a point about data. It is always
challenging to make the decision about where to request data and
where to require it, and how to get the right balance between
ensuring that the tax system is effective—we need data in order
to make sure of that—and not creating an undue burden on
businesses.
The purpose behind the collection of this data is to ensure both
that we have the best information possible to make decisions in
the future and that we balance proportionately the information
that we collect to make sure that the tax is collected in the
right way. I say to my hon. Friend the Member for Waveney that,
with regard to the administrative questions, we are committed to
a soft launch of the collection of this data. We will not
activate the compliance regime until we are satisfied that it
works, and we will be piloting it further with a range of users.
We accept that we need to get this right, but the principles
behind ensuring that we have the most up-to-date system, which
requires data to achieve, are sound. It will be through the pilot
and the review process, following the Bill hopefully becoming
law, that we will be able to review the changes to make sure that
they work for businesses in the best way possible.
Briefly, my hon. Friend the Member for Waveney also touched on
clause 14, which recognises the particular challenge visible
during covid. Of course everybody in this House will have hoped
that highly unusual and atypical events such as covid could never
happen, but because they have, it is incumbent on us all in this
place to make sure that we have considered the situation
should—hopefully it will never happen—such atypical events happen
again in the future. We are trying through clause 14 to recognise
that such things may happen, while hoping that they never will. I
am grateful to my hon. Friend for his constructive comments. He
says that the Bill is a step in the right direction, and we
agree. I hope that my comments now have reassured him about those
other steps that he is not yet sure about.
The hon. Member for North Shropshire made a number of important
points about the burden of business rates, about ensuring that
they are proportionate, and about the challenge of taxation in
general. She is absolutely right to do so, but it would have made
more sense had the Leader of the Liberal Democrats, the right
hon. Member for Kingston and Surbiton (), not been out on the airwaves just a few days ago
committing himself to spending more money, which the country does
not have, and which taxes such as this have to pay for. There is
a consistency problem with the Liberal Democrats. For those of us
who are not in the Liberal Democrats, we recognise that
consistency is something that they have never shown.
Finally, I welcome the fact that those on the Opposition Front
Bench will not be opposing the Bill tonight. I also welcome their
generally constructive comments, and I hope that I have been able
to answer them, but—there is always a but with the Opposition
Front Bench—the hon. Member for Luton North () suggested that we were waiting
for a Labour Government to fix this issue. The question is what
the fix would be, because we have put forward a plan that ensures
relief for businesses up and down the land. Was she talking about
the fix of 2021, when the right hon. Member for Leeds West
() was going to scrap business
rates? Is it the fix a few days later, after 2021, when it was to
significantly change business rates, but not to scrap them? Or is
it the fix of 2022 when business rates were to be modernised but
without any clarity as to how that would happen. The Labour party
says what it needs to say, but it has no plan on issues such as
this.
In front of us today is a Bill that improves and modernises our
business rates and makes them more efficient and effective, on
top of £14 billion of relief for all businessmen and women and
all businesses across the country. It makes sure that those rates
are as effective and efficient as they can be and that businesses
in this country thrive in the future.
Question put and agreed to.
Bill accordingly read a Second time.
Non-Domestic Rating Bill (Programme)
Motion made, and Question put forthwith (Standing Order No.
83A(7)),
That the following provisions shall apply to the Non-Domestic
Rating Bill:
Committal
(1) The Bill shall be committed to a Committee of the whole
House.
Proceedings in Committee, on Consideration and on Third
Reading
(2) Proceedings in Committee of the whole House shall (so far as
not previously concluded) be brought to a conclusion three hours
after their commencement.
(3) Any proceedings on Consideration and proceedings on Third
Reading shall (so far as not previously concluded) be brought to
a conclusion four hours after the commencement of proceedings in
Committee of the whole House.
(4) Standing Order No. 83B (Programming committees) shall not
apply to proceedings in Committee of the whole House, to any
proceedings on Consideration or to proceedings on Third
Reading.
Other proceedings
(5) Any other proceedings on the Bill may be programmed.—(.)
Question agreed to.
Non-Domestic Rating Bill (Money)
King’s recommendation signified.
Motion made, and Question put forthwith (Standing Order No.
52(1)(a)),
That, for the purposes of any Act resulting from the Non-Domestic
Rating Bill, it is expedient to authorise the payment out of
money provided by Parliament of any increase attributable to the
Act in the sums payable under any other Act out of money so
provided.—(.)
Question agreed to.
Non-Domestic Rating Bill (Ways and Means)
Motion made, and Question put forthwith (Standing Order No.
52(1)(a)),
That, for the purposes of any Act resulting from the Non-Domestic
Rating Bill, it is expedient to authorise:
(1) the payment of sums to the Secretary of State in respect of
non-domestic rating,
(2) the payment of those and other sums into the Consolidated
Fund.—(.)
Question agreed to.
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