Moved by Baroness Scott of Bybrook That the Bill be now read a
second time. The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department
for Levelling Up, Housing & Communities (Baroness Scott of
Bybrook) (Con) My Lords, this Bill delivers important changes to
the business rates system. Business rates are a key component of
the way in which local services are funded and are set to raise
almost £25 billion this year. However, in recent years, concerns
have been...Request free trial
Moved by
That the Bill be now read a second time.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Levelling Up, Housing & Communities () (Con)
My Lords, this Bill delivers important changes to the business
rates system. Business rates are a key component of the way in
which local services are funded and are set to raise almost £25
billion this year. However, in recent years, concerns have been
raised about the fairness of the tax and its impact on a
competitive business environment.
Taking on board these concerns, the Government committed to
reviewing the business rates system. We completed this process in
October 2021, following extensive engagement with businesses,
councils and others. The conclusions were clear: like any tax,
the business rates system has flaws but it also has significant
advantages that are important to protect. These include the tax’s
relative stability, how easy it is to collect, how hard it is to
avoid and its clear links to the locations where its revenue is
spent. The majority of respondents to our review supported the
continuation of business rates and did not support the disruption
of a major overhaul. Overwhelmingly, they favoured measures to
modernise the tax—especially moving to more frequent
revaluations, which I will turn to shortly.
At the conclusion of the review in 2021, the Government announced
a £7 billion package of support for businesses over five years,
alongside a package of reforms. Since then, the Valuation Office
Agency has delivered a revaluation, completing valuations for
around 2 million properties in England, which reflects changes in
the property market since 2015. Revaluations are crucial to
ensuring a fairer distribution of rates bills. This revaluation,
for example, rebalanced the burden between online and physical
retail: on average, bricks and mortar retailers saw decreases of
around 20%.
We made sure that the revaluation was manageable for businesses
by introducing a £13.6 billion package of business support, which
included freezing the business rates multiplier at a cost of £9.3
billion over the next five years. The Government have therefore
provided considerable support into the business rates system
while balancing the needs of local communities, which rely on
funding for local services. However, we remain focused on the
need for longer-term reform.
Throughout our review, businesses expressed their desire to keep
business rates as accurate and responsive as possible. The Bill
therefore delivers a more frequent revaluation cycle for business
rates, moving from five-yearly to three-yearly. Following the
revaluation that took effect this April, the next will occur in
April 2026 and every three years thereafter. This is a positive
step for business as it will ensure that the tax is fairly
distributed more frequently. It is a major reform of the system,
responding to the calls of many stakeholders, and is deliverable
in the short term.
However, I recognise that there have been calls for greater
ambition. Let me be clear: we are prepared to explore how we can
go further in future. In particular, we wish to reduce the gap
between the date against which rateable values are assessed and
when they come into force, which has been set at two years for
the 2026 revaluation. We will also carefully consider the case
for an annual revaluations cycle in the longer term. However, we
must take these steps sequentially. To deliver a revaluation, the
VOA must carry out 2 million valuations in the time available—a
major endeavour. Moving to more frequent revaluations means that
other changes are necessary to enable the Valuation Office Agency
to compile more accurate valuations at greater speed.
We have heard repeatedly from businesses that getting these
valuations right is vital to sustaining public confidence in the
tax. We also heard concerns that moving to an annual cycle would
increase the volatility of bills and potentially damage the
accuracy of valuations. It is therefore right that we monitor the
implementation of the first three-yearly revaluation cycle and
the supporting reforms before taking further action.
Delivering three-yearly revaluations on a sustainable basis will
rely on the VOA having access to more timely and complete
information. The Bill therefore introduces new obligations on
ratepayers to provide the VOA with relevant information. This
will bring business rates in line with other taxes, where
self-declaration is absolutely the norm.
As part of our wider modernisation of the business rates system,
the Bill also introduces a new requirement on ratepayers to
provide a taxpayer reference number to His Majesty’s Revenue
& Customs. This small extra step will connect the business
rates information held locally by councils with HMRC tax data,
delivering benefits such as better targeting of and improved
compliance with rates relief schemes. Ratepayers will also be
able to provide relevant information to the VOA, and their
taxpayer reference number to HMRC, through a single
straightforward online service on GOV.UK.
It is entirely right that we consider the potential burden on
businesses of new administrative requirements. The Government
have taken steps to minimise these burdens, have published
estimates of the expected costs and will provide guidance for
ratepayers.
I want to address some specific concerns about the VOA duty to
notify that have been raised with me. First, on what information
the Government are asking ratepayers to provide, the duty is not
limited to information that the Valuation Office Agency needs to
do its job and no more; it is also explicit on the face of the
Bill that ratepayers will be expected to provide to the Valuation
Office Agency only information that is within their “possession
or control” and which they could reasonably be expected to know
would assist the valuation office. The VOA will continue to make
use of supplementary sources of evidence in order to minimise the
burden on ratepayers.
Secondly, let me provide some reassurance about whether this will
be complex for ratepayers. To comply with the duty, in practice a
ratepayer will only have to visit GOV.UK, use the online service
and answer all the questions asked of them. They will receive
multiple reminders to support them in providing the right
information.
Thirdly, to ensure that the VOA has the most complete set of
information to deliver more frequent revaluations, it will be
necessary for ratepayers to confirm each year that the
information that the VOA holds on their property is correct. For
ratepayers whose information is up to date, this step should take
only a few minutes. For those who have not remembered to keep
their information up to date, this stage will serve as a further
reminder to rectify that.
Finally, we will continue to design the new processes in
partnership with businesses and interested parties, and we will
not activate the duty until we are satisfied that ratepayers can
reasonably and efficiently comply. I thank those noble Lords who
came to the drop-in sessions. That gave me the ability to answer
those questions up front, although I am of course happy to pick
up anything further in winding up.
As we move to more frequent revaluations, the Government have
considered how to improve the support that we provide to
businesses adapting to changing bills. At last year’s Autumn
Statement, the Chancellor announced that he would permanently
remove the requirement for revenue neutrality from transitional
relief. That change is given effect by this Bill. This means that
for the 2023 revaluation, there are no downward caps, which
previously restricted falls in bills. Businesses have therefore
seen the full benefit of falling bills immediately. As a result,
the 300,000 properties with falls in rateable value at the
revaluation have seen the full benefit of that reduction in their
new business rates bill from April 2023. Going forward, we will
use that freedom to permanently fund all future transitional
relief schemes without recourse to downward caps. I am happy to
give that commitment in the House.
It is also important that we protect the integrity of
revaluations. Between revaluations, rateable values should change
only for a material change in circumstances, or MCC. MCC
challenges are designed for cases such as roadworks outside a
shop causing access difficulties. This Bill will preserve that
principle by providing that changes in legislation, advice or
guidance by a public body are not a material change in
circumstances. We consider that such matters are related to the
general conditions of the market and so belong in the revaluation
process.
Interestingly, the noble Earl, , identified the scenario of a
vaping ban as an example of how this measure could have
unwarranted consequences. In fact, his example underlines why we
need to clarify the law concerning MCCs. Without this clarity,
over recent years the Valuation Office Agency has been forced to
consider whether legislation changes such as smoking bans or the
introduction of the congestion charge should affect rateable
values. The result was uncertainty for the ratepayer and for
local government.
In the future, we will have clarity in Clause 14, ensuring that
changes in legislation such as that, which clearly concern the
general economic conditions and level of rents, are reflected for
all at the next revaluation. These revaluations will of course be
happening more frequently under this Bill, and any physical
consequences of new legislation on a property will continue to be
reflected as and when they arise.
This Bill also introduces an important new relief to support
businesses investing in their properties, responding to another
key stakeholder ask during the review. Currently, our business
rates are a tax on the value of the property, so businesses may
see an immediate increase in their rates bill for any
improvements that they make to their property. From 1 April 2024,
this Bill will mean that no business will face higher business
rates bills for 12 months as a result of qualifying improvements
to a property that they occupy. The Bill prescribes powers for
Ministers to set conditions for the availability of the relief,
and the Government’s policy on this has been set out in our
earlier technical consultation. My department has published draft
regulations for consultation so that noble Lords may review how
the Government intend to exercise these powers.
Finally, the Bill makes changes to the calculation of business
rates multipliers—or tax rates. In recent years, government
policy has been to uprate the lower multiplier each year by the
consumer price index rather than the higher retail price index.
The Bill ensures that the CPI is the default uprating for both
multipliers, reducing the potential inflationary burden on
businesses. The Bill also provides a power to uprate at a level
lower than CPI, and to directly set which properties are subject
to which multiplier, allowing the Treasury greater flexibility in
the support it can provide.
In conclusion, this Bill modernises the business rates system by
bringing valuations more in line with the property market,
improving the data underpinning the system, removing barriers to
investment and improving fairness. I look forward to hearing the
contributions of noble Lords on this important subject. Many of
your Lordships have called for reform of this tax for some time,
and I am confident that this Bill delivers it. I beg to move.
6.36pm
(LD)
My Lords, I declare my interest as vice-president of the Local
Government Association. I am very grateful to the Minister for
her introduction to this Bill. It had a speedy and
uncontroversial passage in the House of Commons, but there are
several matters which this House will need to discuss in
Committee. I will identify some of them.
There has been a lot of concern about the business rates system
in recent years. That relates partly to Covid, partly to the rise
in internet purchasing and partly to the very high cost of
business rates. There have been several reviews. Some of the
conclusions of the recent one by the Government are now part of
the Bill, which I welcome. I concede that business rating is not
an easy issue. Business rates form a substantial element in a
business’s costs and in a council’s income. There is a balance to
be struck. I remember that when business rates were decided
locally there was a campaign by major businesses—particularly
high street retailers, notably John Lewis—for a national system.
At the time, things were so chaotic, with some councils trying to
increase business rates to make up a shortfall in government
grant, that I supported that change. But that was 30 years ago
and times have changed.
The Government have a proposal to lower the period between
valuations from five years to three years, which certainly is
better than the current five-year rule. I would prefer two years,
and I look forward to seeing whether any other Members of your
Lordships’ House feel similarly. Maybe we need to discuss this in
Committee, but in an ideal world it might be better to have a
one-year revaluation. However, for the time being I prefer two
years. I hope that the Minister agrees that, even if we end up
with three years, we could look in the medium term at that
reduction. That would help.
The 2019 Conservative manifesto promised to reduce the burden of
business rates by
“a fundamental review of the system”.
There has not really been a fundamental review of the system, and
I suspect that is because any fundamental reform is inevitably
long-term. The aim of the review started in March 2020 was to
reduce the overall burden on businesses, improve the business
rates system and consider more fundamental reform in the medium
to long term. It is true that there have been reductions in the
overall burden for some businesses and that, in some cases, what
is being proposed in the Bill will improve the business rates
system, but I do not think that the more fundamental reform is
being delivered in the medium to long term.
Currently, local authorities keep 50% of business rates. Some
have 100% retention and there are various pilots of different
amounts taking place. As we know from the recent announcement,
the West Midlands will retain its business rates for 10 years and
that trend towards a return to devolved responsibility for
business rates as a fiscal policy is welcome.
I have always felt that rentable value—and, hence, rateable
value—is a sound method for assessing value. For the time being
at least, it is important that it stays, because it seems to be
the preference of all those who were recently consulted. I
support rates relief for improvements to property and for heat
networks, and welcome what the Minister said about that. I
support the proposal to give businesses the immediate benefit of
a rate reduction while keeping transitional relief for increases;
that is helpful.
I wonder about the thresholds, and again we might test this in
Committee. Business rates are not paid on properties with a
rateable value of less than £12,000, and there are tapered
reductions up to £15,000. I wonder why those figures are not
being raised and whether the Minister, when she replies, could
tell us what assessment has been made of increasing the threshold
level. That could be very helpful to a large number of small
businesses.
The Minister and the Bill say that there are all kinds of
increased powers for the Valuation Office Agency. There is a
question of whether businesses should have to notify the
valuation office of changes that could impact a property’s
rateable value, and my view is that they should. If it is simply
as the Minister described a few minutes ago—taking a moment or
two to sign off that nothing has changed—I cannot see a problem
with it. As long as the publicity around that requirement is
effective, all should be well. But, if it is not done that way,
the Government need to be very careful about penalising
businesses that have not understood the rule.
When I read the Bill and the relevant briefings on it, notably
the Library briefing, it occurred to me that everybody else
paying business rates had all kinds of obligations being placed
on them, but I did not see many obligations being placed on the
Valuation Office Agency to respond effectively within time limits
and by doing the right thing by the person inquiring. I would
like the Minister to confirm that the Government have plans to
impose standards of performance on the Valuation Office Agency,
because there have been complaints about it in the past,
particularly about notifications of valuation level and the
transparency of the decisions it has made. It is very important
to be able to have a quick dialogue with a business rate payer.
We need to test that the Valuation Office Agency is being open
and transparent, and is applying quality standards. I hope the
Minister agrees that that would be useful.
The Minister might also wish to comment on the small business
multiplier, which is 49.9p in the pound at the moment. I wonder
whether there is a case for having a slightly lower multiplier
for small businesses. Taken in the round, that relates to the
£12,000 threshold. In the end, the aim would be to encourage
small businesses to thrive, and to generate jobs and greater
economic activity. I would be interested to know how the Minister
feels about that.
I read a suggestion that there should be a licensing, or maybe a
regulatory, system for business rate advisers. There are
apparently some setting themselves up to give business rates
advice to small businesses. What steps might the Government take
to license or regulate such advisers?
In conclusion—almost—I believe in the business rates system being
composed of three elements, at least for the short to medium
term. One is property, because a building may attract the fire
service or police support if it were to be burgled, so property
is one element. The second element is the value of the land on
which a building is built, which is lower in some places than
others, and this should be reflected in the business rate levy.
The third element is online sales. I believe that that has been
understated for some considerable time. I would like a high
street retail outlet to pay equivalent business rate levels to an
online company because, in 2019-20, only 5% of retail sector
income was raised by online retailers; 95% was, broadly speaking,
from high street locations. The Government said that they would
make a fundamental change to the business rate system in the
medium to long term; that is one of the fundamental changes that
I think should be investigated.
I wonder whether we need a comprehensive register of freehold
property ownership. Without it, it is difficult to locate
ownership. I do not know what the Government think about
that.
My last point relates to material change of circumstance. There
is a debate about whether, if the Government legislate on
something, that can or cannot be a material change of
circumstance. As I understand it, that debate derives from the
Covid pandemic. I have thought about it and think we need to test
this in Committee, because there is a case for saying that, if
the Government legislate on something, it may force some business
rate payers to face a material change of circumstances. We need
to understand better the Government’s thinking on an MCC.
Overall, I welcome this move and what is happening, and all of
what I have said is an attempt to make the Bill even better.
6.48pm
The (CB)
My Lords, it is always a pleasure to have another go at business
rate legislation. As I always do, I inform the House that I am a
fellow of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, and a
member of the Institute of Revenues Rating and Valuation and of
the Rating Surveyors’ Association. I am also a co-owner of a
non-domestic hereditament that benefits from small business
exemption, and I used to work in the Inland Revenue valuation
office.
With those declarations, I thank the Minister for reaching out
and arranging a meeting with her and her officials, and for the
follow-up information provided. I am extremely grateful for that.
I agree with many of her overarching statements on what is
happening here.
When I asked what impact assessments had been carried out—a
matter to which the noble Lord, , referred—I was told that it
is not customary to undertake them for tax-related purposes and I
was offered a rather less detailed impact note. I feel that
business rate payers must not be used as a beta test bed for
emerging ideas and that the repeated suggestions that the
Valuation Office Agency will see how things progress are,
arguably, destabilising in their own right.
I have said before in this House that, to some extent, this is
another attempt to make an old steam loco do what it was never
designed to do in terms of the burdens imposed and the
reliability of the system. At a levied rate of more than 50% of
the assessed annual value of every business property, this
remains a tax that is objectively excessive to the point that it
imperils its own stability. It is also out of kilter with
international comparators. It burdens businesses
disproportionately by reference to property value and, most
particularly, as to the use and benefit of local services in
which they have no formal voice and certainly no vote. Worse, it
discourages a certain amount of investment and entrepreneurial
activity. Complexity and new burdens continue to be added because
HMRC can do so without responsibility for outcomes or risk of
push-back. Council tax payers, by contrast, have for many years
been protected from any comparable increase in their level of
local financial contribution.
Short-termism and modal shift are the outcomes of changes in
economics and are, to some extent, propelled further by the
business rates environment. Firms that would once have been high
street operators now function from cheaper industrial sites,
where the shop window is on the internet or social media, the
stockroom is the white van on the highway network, and the cash
desk is a web-based payment system. Former shopping streets are
populated with eateries and charity shops—I should add that many
charity shops do not pay business rates. Shorter leases and break
clauses are part and parcel of the landscape. Many and varied
reliefs have had to be given to address the problems, and the
rules relating to them have become ever-more complex. That apart,
the Minister is right that a property-based business tax is an
effective system provided it is used correctly, and that is a
very important proviso.
On the detail, I start with Clause 1, which inserts new Schedule
4ZA into the 1988 Act, and Part 3 of that new schedule relating
to the proposed improvement relief. I have already expressed to
the Minister in a private meeting my surprise that improvements
which may have a lifespan of 20 years or more will benefit from
only a single year’s disapplication of any rental value uplift
they create. While I understand that it is specifically intended
that the relief should not benefit investors or developers, I
cannot disentangle this from standard commercial lease terms in
which the landlord’s consent and co-operation may be required.
The architecture here is, to some extent, misconceived. Although
I am informed that substantial funds are earmarked for this, I
fail to see any incentive likely to overcome the narrow
qualification criteria for this relief. Meanwhile, we still have
the situation where heavy industry is obliged, in many cases, to
put in at additional expense complex emission controls and other
measures, adding nothing to the productive capacity of the
property but where the plant and machinery element represented by
those improvements is increased thereby and the rateable value
with it. This is nonsense and should not continue.
In Clause 5, I welcome the general direction of travel towards
shorter revaluation cycles, but they need to be more frequent
still. If Scotland can do it, so can we in England. As the rate
of mercantile change accelerates, it is clear the non-domestic
rating system has not kept up, has been slow to adapt, and has
created a large measure of injustice and inequality, damaging
confidence in the tax and, to some extent, the credibility of
those responsible for its management. This is regrettable.
Clause 6, on transitional relief, is a welcome shift. I simply
ask whether it is the Government’s intention to abolish downward
phasing altogether—an arrangement in which those who should be
paying lower business rates gain only on some never-never
principle because this funds transitional relief for those who
should be paying more. In terms of natural justice, I would be
glad to see it gone and the principles of fiscal neutrality
become more elastic. The Minister’s assurances given a few
moments ago are welcome.
Clause 10 is welcome because it has long been a complaint that,
while the Valuation Office Agency demands information from
ratepayers’ representatives to justify valuations, VOA officers
can effectively ignore similar requests from ratepayers. On
transparency grounds, this has long needed rectification. We will
have to see how this turns out or whether the confidentiality
arguments that have been put forward in the past will continue to
be fielded as a reason for the VOA not honouring the spirit of
this provision. However, I welcome it for what it is thus
far.
Clause 13 is a new reporting obligation. I thought the rationale
behind the frequency of making declarations of changes—an event
date plus 60 days, in addition to a financial year end plus 60
days’ reporting—was that if ratepayers had to make a disclosure
with that frequency then reviews of the valuation list should
match that. That seems logical. That was my reading of the
message from the consultation process. Requiring virtual
real-time data, which is in effect what this Bill asks for, was
the corollary of having annual—or at any rate, much more
frequent—valuation list updates. Given this asymmetry, I welcome
the Minister’s comments about the potential for further
shortening the revaluation frequency and the antecedent date gap
between the date of valuation and the date of coming into force
of the list.
On the detail of the declarations required, there are in fact two
separate circumstances. The first is the information to be
provided to HMRC, as set out in Clause 13(2) which inserts new
paragraphs into Schedule 9 of the 1988 Act. New paragraph 4F
spells out that it is a change in any of three instances of
taxpayer reference, VAT registration and national insurance
number. However, I remain unclear how the tax bit in particular
works for a sole trader operating as an incorporated business.
The proposition seems needlessly fussy.
The reporting arrangement for this is set out in the previous
paragraph 4E and is to HMRC’s portal. All the information
required by paragraph 4F will already be known to central
government departments—hey ho. But secondly, at paragraph 4J,
there is a separate requirement to report any notifiable
information within the ratepayer’s possession or control,
including, at paragraph 4J(2)(a) and (b), any changes in the
ratepayer identity or, as we have heard, anything,
“that would or might affect the existence, extent or rateable
value of the hereditament”.
This is not just physical change. Many ratepayers do not
understand what constitutes a “hereditament”, let alone what may
be deemed in the view of the VOA to affect it. Although I take
the point made by the Minister that this extends at paragraph
4J(3) to what the ratepayer
“knows, or could reasonably be expected to know, that it would
assist a valuation officer in carrying out functions”,
I hope we are going to get a clearer definition at some stage and
an explanation of the apparent lack of impact analysis,
especially as regards small businesses at one end of the spectrum
and a retailer with hundreds of hereditaments at the other.
Furthermore, the reporting arrangement under paragraph 4J is not,
as one might expect, to HMRC as before but potentially via a
different system to be set up by the VOA, using an online
facility referred to at paragraph 4L. There will potentially be
two different portal routes. I understand that there is to be a
pilot, and that the reporting arrangements are to be consolidated
via one portal, and that this will not be implemented unless the
VOA is satisfied it is fully functional. That is very welcome in
what otherwise could be unnecessary duplication.
I remind your Lordships that the barriers to accessing the check,
challenge and appeal system under the business rates process were
put in place deliberately to deter the so-called rating agent
cowboys. I hope there will be some guarantee that, under this new
data-harvesting exercise, small unrepresented businesses will not
fall into the hands of precisely the same charlatans, or indeed
the complex access arrangements intended to defeat them that
plagued the appeal system.
None of this negates the ongoing obligation to respond to a more
specific demand for information which VOA can make of a ratepayer
at any time during the year. Nor is the beneficiary of small
business exemption exempt from all the same requirements, even
though they pay no rates. Processing tens of thousands of
additional annual returns, as I am told is the likely outcome,
has not obviously been factored into all this, and the impact
note’s suggestion of a £15 a pop cost to businesses seems to me a
significant underassessment.
Picking up a point made by the noble Lord, , there is also no guarantee
that the VOA will act promptly either to advise of the likely
implications of any change or, indeed, to implement them by
changing the rateable value. To my mind, this is still an
unnecessarily one-sided and open-ended arrangement, prone to
arbitrary redefinition and, potentially, to equally arbitrary
determination of claimed infractions. I do not see it as a
necessary light touch; rather, as an additional and potentially
burdensome obligation, possibly—although I hope not—involving two
different gateways for reporting. That is what is actually set
out in the Bill.
Clause 14 deals with the redefinition of material change of
circumstances. Here, I am bound to say that I do not follow the
logic: namely, that changes in statutory or regulatory measures
should be taken as part of general market changes and reflected
only at revaluations, although I note that the clause does not
preclude taking account of changes of a physical nature or the
state or locality of the hereditament meantime.
First, just about anything done by dint of administrative powers
is by definition a child of statute. If, for instance, a vaping
ban—which the Minister referred to and which I raised with
her—renders a specific category of business unviable overnight,
or, more typically, a low-emission zone, diesel vehicle ban or
traffic management scheme is introduced that reduces retail
footfall and mercantile activity at a stroke, is it right that
this should be excluded from a definition of material change of
circumstances?
For such matters to be disregarded, they should, first, apply to
all businesses and, secondly, be disregarded only where a
significant adjustment period has been allowed for business rate
payers to take this into account. In all other cases save
national emergency, the consequences for business rate yields
should immediately be felt by the public sector that imposes them
and not via this free-bet measure that transfers the entire risk
on to businesses. I would be grateful if the Minister could
elaborate on that point.
The Explanatory Notes’ suggestion at paragraph 37, that this
will
“restore the law to its originally intended extent”,
is, I am afraid, simply not something I recognise. Plus, in my
professional lifetime we have managed for over 50 years without
there ever being an issue requiring such negation of
materiality.
I will end my detailed points at this juncture, but I may well
return at later stages of this Bill with amendments. I am bound
to say that, whatever imagination may have been applied by the
architects of this Bill, it has not been viewed from the
standpoint of business, particularly as I perceive it from the
briefing of the Shopkeepers’ Campaign and from professionals to
whom I have talked.
If businesses need to count their fingers every time they
figuratively shake hands with the Government on some taxation
matter, we are in very negative territory. When the Government
continue to claim that the postponement of the 2015 revaluation
was “to give business certainty”, as repeated at paragraph 7 of
the Explanatory Notes, it makes me cringe. Patently, it was all
to do with maintaining tax yield. Businesses did get
certainty—that is to say, the guarantee of continuing to pay
business rates based on the peak value levels of 2008—but on
sharply fallen values, reduced business activity and with
substantially increased costs of trading. This was a
misrepresentation, and everybody knows it. It is time for an
attitude change.
7.04pm
(CB)
My Lords, I declare my interest as the owner of investment retail
property in the high street. I am extremely grateful to the
Minister for her clear and illuminating introduction to the Bill,
and to the noble Lord, , and the noble Earl, , who have covered a wide range
of the issues. Many of us, including myself, have spoken about
this issue of business rates in the context of the Levelling-up
and Regeneration Bill, so I will keep my comments very brief.
As the Minister has outlined, there are good provisions in this
Bill. A reduction of time between revaluations from five years to
three is a good move. Indexing non-domestic rating multipliers to
the consumer prices index rather than RPI is obviously welcome.
Introducing rates reliefs for improvements to property and heat
networks is also desirable, and allowing the Treasury to give
businesses the immediate benefit of rates reductions while
maintaining transitional relief for rates increases is good.
Undoubtedly, a great number of positive things have come from the
Bill.
However, as noble Lords have pointed out, there are significant
flaws and omissions, and I want to deal with them briefly. First,
I take up the question of the obligation to notify the VOA of any
changes affecting a property’s retail value. This is separate
from the annual return, and its effect is to extend a reporting
obligation to businesses that currently pay no business rates due
to reliefs. They will have to send information to the VOA—a
purely bureaucratic exercise that will not result in any increase
in the business rates receipts. It is, for them, just a
bureaucratic headache, and they will have to do this within 60
days of the change or face a penalty. I question whether this is
an appropriate obligation for the people I have mentioned, who
pay no business rates and would not pay any, despite the change I
have indicated. It has been suggested that an additional 700,000
businesses may have to send such information, pursuant to that
duty to notify.
So far as the material change of circumstances is concerned, I
agree with both noble Lords who have spoken before me. I can see
no good reason why legislation or other public body advice that
may impact on rateable value should not be taken into account as
a material change of circumstance. The Minister referred to
vaping, but many other circumstances could indeed have an impact
on rateable values through legislation. We cannot predict this,
but simply banning outright any possibility of that sort of
change through legislation having an impact on rateable values
seems to me to be quite wrong. One suggestion from one of the
people who briefed us was that changes in the laws relating to
energy protection certificates might have an impact.
The next matter is annual revaluations. I would certainly support
the suggestion of the noble Lord, , that, if we cannot have
annual revaluations, we should at least go for two-yearly
revaluations in the interim. Getting as near as you can to the
actual date in respect of valuation and payment is obviously of
great value to everybody, and particularly to businesses
operating through retail trade.
I also support both noble Lords’ view that consideration should
be given to changing the antecedent valuation date, which is
normally two years before the list is applied. Property values
are already two years out of date before the first rates bill is
set according to the valuation appeal. That antecedent valuation
date should be set at one year, as in Scotland, as has been
referred to, to bring valuations as close to current market
conditions as possible.
I think the noble Earl, , mentioned that limiting the
new improvement relief to 12 months does not seem to make much
sense. It will certainly do little to encourage long-term
investment. There should be a permanent abolition of downwards
transitional phasing but we do not currently find that in the
Bill.
At the end of the day, the point I want to emphasise is that the
problem here is, quite simply, that business rates are too high.
The background for this discussion is that the Centre for Retail
Research has found that more than 17,000 shops closed in 2022 and
more than 5% of retail staff—150,000—lost their jobs last year
through insolvencies and store closures, and there is no doubt
that a major contributing factor to that is the business rates
system in England. The current rates have been referred to; the
standard multiplier for 2023-24 is 51.2p in the pound. We can
contrast that with the uniform business rate multiplier of 34p at
its introduction in 1990. Again, I agree with the noble Lord,
, that the 49.9p in the pound
business multiplier for small businesses is too high.
In both the Conservative Party’s 2019 election manifesto and the
December 2019 Queen’s Speech, there was a commitment to
“protecting your high street and community from excessive tax
hikes and keeping town centres vibrant”
and to make sure that the business rates revaluations and
valuations achieved that. The Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill
focuses on failing high streets and town centres, and there is no
doubt that to a large extent that is due to one of the only
overheads that retailers cannot negotiate away or down—the
rates.
The failure to reduce the uniform business rates significantly is
all the more surprising bearing in mind the Office for Budget
Responsibility’s forecasting that income from business rates will
rise to nearly £36 billion by 2027-28 from its current level of
£28.5 billion. We must do something much more dramatic about this
than we currently find in the Bill.
7.13pm
(LD)
My Lords, I regret that I was unable to attend the Minister’s
meeting last week due to a prior medical appointment. She has
partly answered some of my concerns, and I will read her
contribution in Hansard to check my understanding.
Business rates are an excellent source of funding for the
Treasury. They are easy to collect and reasonably difficult to
avoid, and they contribute 5% of the country’s tax receipts.
While mayor, I was frequently lobbied by local businesses for
which the first eye-opening piece of information was that the
council did not get to keep all our business rates—far from it.
There was a time when I would say, “We collect £60 million but
get back only £6 million”. That will have changed now with 50%
retention, but the sector continues to lobby for 100% retention
while understanding and acknowledging the need for
equalisation.
An issue of wider concern for me is that there remain no
incentives for local authorities to really invest in business and
economic growth under the current system, yet the economic health
of a council area, regardless of whether it is rural or urban, is
the critical factor in its prosperity and all that flows from
living in a prosperous place. The converse is also true—the
poorest regions have the worst outcomes of whatever you care to
measure—but that is a debate for another day.
It has to be said that these have been a tough few years for
businesses. The pandemic has faded in the memory but not in its
impact. Many businesses have failed, and many are still
attempting to get back to pre-pandemic levels. Then there has
been Brexit. Both in itself and in the Government’s mishandling
of, it is yet another hurdle or barrier, as are rising energy
costs, the highest inflation for a generation and the
unbelievable mini-Budget mess back in October, the impact of
which was far from mini.
It is against that backdrop that we get this Bill, so I hope the
Minister will forgive us if we are not dancing in the high street
saying that it is going to be a game-changer. To be fair, though,
the measures in the Bill have to be set against other measures,
such as those in the levelling-up Bill and the impact of the
business rates retention pilots that are currently taking
place.
It is also true to say that businesses on the whole have welcomed
the Bill, but they lament that it is a far cry from full
business-rate reform. If there is one part of the system that is
hit hardest, it is retail, because it is a tax on existence, not
profit. Shops are property-based, reliant on having a physical
presence in the most profitable and therefore most expensive
locations. Internet-based businesses or those which have more
warehousing in out-of-town centres are not penalised to the same
extent. These discrepancies are not addressed by the Bill. I note
the Minister’s remarks regarding recent revaluations and I think
we should perhaps look specifically at the reduction in high
street properties to see what kinds of shops have been
affected.
As the noble and learned Lord, , has said, the situation is
serious. The Centre for Retail Research found that 17,000 shops
closed last year—that is 47 shops a day, the highest annual total
in five years. More than 5% of retail staff lost their jobs last
year, and hospitality suffered a similar fate. Not all these
failures are because of business rates, of course, but I am sure
they are a contributing factor.
Anyone working with their chambers of commerce will know that the
number one concern of businesses—and we should not forget that
these are often the small and medium-sized businesses in an
area—is always business rates. Business rates are a fixed cost
that business cannot escape. Businesses have to pay this tax
before they have turned a penny in profit. The reality for our
high streets specifically is that high rates discourage casual
lettings of vacant properties, and in general they disincentivise
improvement or expansion, let alone innovation.
So we believe the Bill is not going to solve issues in our high
streets. Regrettably, it appears to increase bureaucracy rather
than cutting red tape. Many businesses will now have to send in
their annual notification, with significant penalties in place if
they get it wrong. The noble and learned Lord, , said that 700,000
businesses could be affected, and I would welcome some
clarification on that. Ultimately the Bill will not reduce the
burden of tax on business, which, as several noble Lords have
said, is too high.
My general overarching concern, and my question to the Minister,
is: what assessment have the Government made of the capability of
both local government and the VOA to deal with the changes in the
Bill, knowing as we do of the resource cuts and staff shortages
over recent years? Have the Government taken into account the
current backlog in dealing with appeals, and other causes of
delay, within the VOA?
From the speeches of other noble Lords and the excellent
briefings that we have received, we can see that the concerns of
business focus on several clear-cut aspects. The Bill proposes a
move to three-year valuations. It was clear that we needed to
move to more frequent valuations, but the feeling is that three
years is not enough to keep up with the sudden changes that
business can experience in difficult times. Perhaps annually
might be too tight and onerous, but why not two—or is this the
Government’s realistic response to the recognition that the VOA
would not cope with annual valuations?
The Bill includes a duty to notify; it requires ratepayers to
notify the agency of changes made within 60 days or face what
seem to be punitive fines. I would be interested to hear the
rationale for why a corresponding duty to respond is not made on
the VOA. The Government could impose a reciprocal duty to respond
and the ratepayer might get a rebate if that was the case.
It is also noted that the Conservative Party’s manifesto for 2019
contained a promise to
“cut the burden of tax on business by reducing business
rates”
yet the uniform business rate multiplier has risen from 34p to
51p. Now, I struggle with the technicality of business rates,
which might be apparent, but can the Minister explain how linking
the uniform business rate to the consumer prices index will
reduce the burden on business? Is the aim of government to reduce
the UBR progressively over time or not?
There are valid fears about the levels of new fines that will be
brought to bear through small businesses not knowing when, or
about what, to update the valuation office. Please can the
Minister assure us that the relevant associations have been
consulted, to bring greater clarity to this new requirement, as
it is surely not the Government’s intention to make matters worse
for small businesses? These significant aspects and the other
specific technical matters mentioned will certainly ensure there
is work to do in Committee; around that, there seems to be a
consensus.
7.21pm
(CB)
My Lords, perhaps I may introduce my remarks with the fact that I
am floating high on a cocktail of painkillers, in advance of
dental surgery tomorrow. If I start mumbling, dribbling or
reading out the order of business by mistake—or indeed, if I keel
over—I apologise in advance, and please move on gracefully to the
next speaker.
I declare my interests as on the register. I am a former
chartered surveyor and responsible for property that is subjected
to non-domestic rates—but it is in Scotland, which is out of
scope.
I fear that the Bill is a missed opportunity. I believe that it
passed quietly through the other place, as the noble Lord, , explained, so it had little
scrutiny there. Yet the current system is not fit for purpose: it
is clunky, out of date and difficult for ratepayers to navigate.
It is also inequitable, because some people pay too much and some
too little. The Bill is a start in a number of ways, but why not
finish the job? How many more non-domestic rating Bills can we
expect?
The Bill addresses some of the concerns but the focus of what is
substantially a technical Bill fails to consider major current
injustices, which the Government seem reluctant or unwilling to
grapple with. I am going to address just four of these headings
quickly today. In doing so, I thank the RICS for its help and the
Minister and her Bill team for the briefing conversations last
week.
My first point is on transparency. The subject of valuation for
rating is quite a dark art. Rateable value is assessed by the
VOA, as we have heard, and is meant to reflect the estimated
rental value of commercial property. Yet, on receiving one’s
rating assessment, one sees no reference whatever to the evidence
upon which that assessment is based. To probe this opaque state
of affairs, where all the cards lie in the hands of the state, it
becomes necessary to lodge an appeal—an expensive and
time-consuming process. There are thousands of appeals in the
queue. Further, small businesses simply cannot afford the cost of
an appeal. As we have heard already, they are unlikely to
understand the process and will simply accept the assessment. In
these difficult times, this pushes their businesses nearer and
nearer to closure. As we just heard from the noble Baroness, Lady
Thornhill, 47 businesses are going bust in the high street every
day. There should be clear transparency as to the evidence used
by the VOA.
My second point is about rogue advisers. I beg your Lordships’
pardon; it is on public interest. Small businesses are the
backbone of the rural economy, encouraged in so many ways by the
Government. The simple example is high street shops. In the
hundreds of smaller market towns throughout this country, those
small shops now compete with Amazon and others in a fight that
they cannot win, certainly not when they are paying rent twice,
or certainly another 50%-plus in commercial rates. High streets
are the heart of these small communities. Combining shopping with
social contact is really the essence of a thriving small society.
People bump into each other; they stop to chat, and might go and
have a cup of coffee together. This is a vital antidote to
loneliness and the mental health risks that are so trumpeted by
government. Rates are pushing these small shops out of business.
Retailers can control so many of their costs: their labour costs,
their inventories and supply lines, their energy use and opening
hours. They cannot control rent or rates—but they can negotiate
with their landlord.
On rogue surveyors, which has been touched on already, the Bill
is changing dramatically the system of non-domestic rates. The
resulting fear and misunderstanding from SMEs will almost
certainly lead to a major opportunity for these rogue agents.
Rating is a very specialised, professional skill and it is
essential that those seeking advice do so from the right people.
These people should be, as we heard from the noble Earl, , from the RICS, from the
Institute of Revenues Rating and Valuation or from the Rating
Surveyors’ Association. That is what they do. What efforts will
the Government make to ensure that rogue surveyors are sidelined
from this process? Those organisations I mentioned provide
standards and governance to their members. There is no point in
chasing a rogue surveyor for bad advice. There will be thousands
of appeals, possibly tens of thousands.
Finally, I would like to mention the internet threat. Why, oh
why, have the Government ducked this issue? It is the elephant in
the room in any non-domestic rating discussion. The phenomenal
growth and success of the low-cost internet sales model is
rendering traditional retailers uncompetitive, as is well known.
They of course must evolve too, but not against unfair odds. The
Bill does nothing to address the valuation imbalance between
these two very different business retailing models. It is almost
as though the Government deny that this threat exists. The Bill
is the perfect opportunity to deal with this and make it fair.
Our high streets are dying and the Government know it. Yet they
are missing the golden opportunity to right this wrong, and to
improve the rating system to meet the user changes taking place
in commerce today.
Many SMEs are too big for the small business reliefs, yet too
small to have cash reserves or access to competitive sources of
capital. I conclude by reminding the Government that simply
throwing taxpayers’ money at the SME sector does not fix the
problem. I believe it is some £2 billion a year at the moment,
which does not even address the problem. This is a great
opportunity missed—so much for the fundamental review. We will
return to these subjects in Committee.
7.29pm
(LD)
My Lords, I remind the House of my relevant interests as a
councillor and as a vice-president of the Local Government
Association.
This Bill is one in a long line of recent Bills making important
amendments to business rates. I reckon that, for at least 35
years, there has been no fundamental reform of the non-domestic
rating system, whereas business practice, as we have been
hearing, latterly from the noble Lord, , has been revolutionised by
the growth of online retailers.
The Minister stated in opening that the Government are focused on
longer-term reform, but being focused on longer-term reform is
not the same as implementing it. All noble Lords who have spoken
so far have brought the Minister’s attention to the fact that
online retailers are benefiting at the expense of our high
streets, despite the fact that the levelling-up Bill is trying to
remedy that. Here is an opportunity to do something about it, and
it has been missed.
The current system creates fundamental inequalities. Out-of-town
online retailers pay significantly less than high street
retailers because of the way business rates are worked out. Many
times in this House I have given the example of a famous online
retailer in a town near me. It pays £45 per square metre in
business rates, whereas a small shop in my own local market town
pays £250 per square metre. That is the extent of the inequality.
It is one of the reasons high streets are finding it difficult to
continue. That is why 47 shops a day are closing. The Government
have a responsibility to address this relative decline of our
high streets by creating a level playing field for our town
centre retailers.
Having said that, this Bill introduces some improvements to the
system. We on these Benches welcome Clause 5, which introduces
the shortening of the period between valuations from five years
to three years. This will help the rating system to respond in a
more timely way to changes in economic circumstances. My noble
friend and the noble and learned
Lord, , have asked the question:
why every three years? Why not every two years or even annually
so that there is greater sensitivity to changes for
businesses?
In their review of non-domestic rates, the Government stated:
“Annual revaluations would provide for the fastest updating of
values, ensuring a highly responsive and up-to-date system, and
this would mean tax liabilities would be closely reflective of
economic conditions, economy wide or localised economic slowdowns
would more quickly feed through into lower rateable values”.
That was posed by the Government, and we agree. Yet, in this
Bill, they are failing to implement that very same thing. I hope
the Minister can explain that for us.
Clause 1 makes changes to unoccupied hereditaments. This is a
complicated part of the Bill. Can the Minister confirm that this
will mean the continuation of the three months’ total relief from
business rates for a property that is unoccupied? It seems that
the proposal in the Bill is for an option for small business
rates to be levied, as opposed to the standard business rates,
after the three months. Can the Minister explain how this will
encourage owners of empty high street shops, for instance, to
relet or find a new use? It is almost the opposite to the way the
council tax levy is used to encourage domestic properties back
into use as homes. It will be interesting to hear what the
Minister has to say on that. The Local Government Association’s
briefing draws attention to the fact that, somehow, large vacant
sites may not pay business rates at all. This appears to be an
anomaly, and perhaps the Minister can throw some light on that as
well
These Benches support the grace period for improvements,
especially those designed to decarbonise or promote net zero, and
the changes applied in this Bill to low-carbon heat networks. All
that is very positive. However, we have concerns about the
Valuation Office Agency’s responsiveness and accountability to
ratepayers. My noble friend has voiced concern about this,
as has my noble friend Lady Thornhill, who asked about reciprocal
responsibilities for the Valuation Office Agency alongside those
in the Bill. There are new, very considerable burdens on
ratepayers to provide more detailed information, so why not for
the Valuation Office Agency as well? Can the Minister say how the
work of the Valuation Office Agency is accountable to ratepayers?
The only example I have is that it produces an annual report,
which is a statement of fact rather than an opportunity for
accountability to the business community.
I turn to the issue of business rate income. The changes to the
existing system will mean a potential reduction in overall income
as a result of the Bill removing the duty to be revenue neutral.
As we know, local government depends on business rates for a
large part of its funding. The Bill makes it clear that all
business rate income has to be allocated to local government
funding. However, where there is a reduction in income as a
result of the Bill, the reference is only to compensation. It
does not explicitly state there will be full compensation for
loss of income. This is very important to local government, which
is under huge financial pressure at the moment and cannot sustain
any further loss of income. I look to the Minister, who has local
government at her heart, to give us the assurance that any loss
of income will result in full compensation.
In this context, I welcome the Government’s promise—I think to
the Local Government Association—to consult on avoidance and
evasion, along the lines of measures already introduced by the
Welsh Senedd and the Scottish Government.
I support what my noble friend raised about the devolution to
councils of business rates, as has been done in the West
Midlands. I thank the Local Government Association again for its
briefing, which also includes the idea of devolution of more
powers over income from business rates. The LGA’s asks
include:
“Giving councils more flexibility on business rates reliefs such
as charitable and empty property relief”
and
“Giving councils the ability to set its own business rates
multiplier—
that would be interesting—
“or at the very least be able to set a multiplier above and below
the nationally set multiplier”.
Finally, the Local Government Association underlines what all of
us have said about the need for
“Consideration of alternative forms of income … including an
e-commerce levy with the funding retained by local
government”.
This has been an interesting debate, enhanced by the expert
contributions of the noble Earl, , the noble Lord, , and the noble and learned
Lord, . I look forward very much to
the Minister’s response.
7.40pm
of Ullock (Lab)
My Lords, I thank the Minister for her thorough introduction and
all noble Lords for their participation. Having been doing the
levelling-up Bill, I have to say that it is nice have a Bill that
is very focused. We broadly support the measures in the Bill.
Clearly, business rates need modernising, as we heard, and some
of the measures in the Bill will provide much-needed support for
struggling businesses. But, like others who spoke in the debate,
we believe that it is still lacking in areas where small
businesses need support, so it is a bit of a missed opportunity
as well.
Small businesses are a critical part of our economy and
communities, and, as we have heard, they are the heart of our
high street and of local employment. On these Benches, we believe
that it is necessary to cut business rates for small businesses
by raising the threshold for small business rate relief. We would
pay for this by raising the digital services tax paid by online
giants such as Amazon.
The noble Lord, , and others mentioned the
increase in online shopping, partly brought about by what
happened during Covid, when many more people began to shop
online. But, as the noble Lord, , said, nothing seems to have
been done about this. So can the Minister provide further
information about any progress at all, if any, that the
Government have made on implementing fair taxes on the major
online businesses?
The Savills analysis of recent business rates revaluation noted
considerable variations in outcomes between different billing
authority areas. It notes that retail units in some city centres
will see an overall reduction in rateable value, but those in
some small towns will see considerable increases—the noble
Baroness, Lady Pinnock, referred to this. So, if the Government
do not think that an impact assessment on the revaluation for
smaller businesses, high streets and towns is needed, how do the
Government see this benefiting levelling up if they do not have
this information?
The noble Baroness, Lady Thornhill, and the noble and learned
Lord, , talked about the serious
challenges facing our high streets and smaller businesses. I
particularly mention concerns that were drawn to my attention by
the British Beer and Pub Association, which has concerns about
certain aspects of the Bill, particularly around the proposals
for improvement relief. Of course, it is important to have the
improvement relief proposals in here—it is a good step
forward—but the British Beer and Pub Association said that
improvements made by landlords in a period between tenants, who
are the ratepayers, or with any change in tenant during the
relief period, will not be eligible for relief. The main concern
here is that improvements made by landlords on behalf of tenants
who then move on while the property remains owned by the landlord
would not be eligible.
In practice, this means that pubs that are not directly owned and
managed by the ratepayer—namely, those in tied or leased
arrangements, which is apparently around 30% of UK pubs—become a
much less attractive proposition for investment, as improvement
relief can be guaranteed only on directly managed pubs. A change
to the Bill to this end would mean that leased and tenanted pubs
could then be on an equal footing with directly managed pubs, in
terms of the likelihood of receiving investment. Will the
Minister take note of these concerns and look, ahead of
Committee, to see whether the Bill could be improved in this
respect?
Retailers have expressed concerns that the Bill will
significantly increase the overall administrative burden through
the new duty to notify procedures—this was a central concern in
the debate. It would be helpful if the Minister could confirm
whether every ratepayer will now have to fill in a new return for
the Valuation Office Agency every year and every time there is a
change to the property. Does she think that the new duty to
notify will put increased burdens on smaller businesses,
potentially forcing them into the hands of rogue rating advisers,
as we heard from other noble Lords, particularly the noble Lord,
?
The noble and learned Lord, , mentioned his concerns
about the extra 750,000-odd business-property occupiers who do
not currently pay rates. They would have to return forms to the
VOA, and they will have to cope with the huge administrative
challenges of this. As well as businesses, this will have an
impact on local authorities. So I would be interested to hear the
Minister’s response to the noble and learned Lord’s concerns.
Will local authorities have extra resources to deal with this
administrative burden?
Noble Lords mentioned how promptly the VOA will act, as no
similar obligations have been placed on it to produce its
assessments quickly, and there have been no further measures to
increase transparency—the noble Lord, , in particular talked about
the importance of transparency. I am not aware that anything
about speeding up the appeals system has been stated, so perhaps
the Minister could provide further information about this.
We heard about the review of valuations changing from five-yearly
to three-yearly intervals, and we are pleased that this has been
reduced. But, bearing in mind that the VOA already has a
significant backlog of appeals, are there sufficient resources
within the VOA to deal with these proposed changes? What will
happen to disparities in valuations between the VOA and the
property owner or agent? Of course, in the audit world, this has
caused major problems between local authorities and their
auditors.
Currently, the new rateable values set at a revaluation are based
on the situation two years previously, which, again, noble Lords
have raised concerns about. Ministers have said that reducing the
length of time between the AVD and a revaluation taking place
remains
“an aspiration once the new 3-yearly cycle and supporting changes
are fully bedded in”.
Can the Minister update us on what progress the department is
making on this?
The noble Earl, , and the noble Baroness, Lady
Thornhill, talked about incentives for business to invest. Do the
Government intend to do anything about tariffs and top-ups? So
many areas have little incentive to improve their business base
because the tariffs can be so fierce.
The Bill is an opportunity to give businesses a clearer incentive
to improve energy efficiency, freeing up funds for business
investments to enhance competitiveness while supporting net zero.
We very much support the Government’s and the Bill’s proposals in
this area. Strengthening the provisions on business rates in
relation to energy-efficiency improvements is certainly an
important step.
The Government have already made welcome steps to address these
issues by exempting renewable energy generation and storage from
rateable value, through regulations introduced last year. But
these regulations did not cover energy-efficiency works, and the
Government have made much more limited steps on energy efficiency
more broadly, proposing just one year of business rate relief
against the increase in rateable value in the Bill.
The introduction of heat network relief, mentioned by noble Lords
and in Clause 1, is welcome, but it would be helpful to
understand why it has been proposed to expire in 2035. The
exemption of renewable energy plant and machinery is permanent,
so why is there a difference here? Could we not take a similar
approach?
Finally, the charity sector has raised concerns that its
exemptions will be affected. Can the Minister provide reassurance
that this will not be the case? Conversely, will the Government
then use the Bill to tackle the fraudulent exemptions claimed
when non-charity businesses let a charity occupy a small part of
their premises, just so that they can then claim that charity
exemption?
In conclusion, we believe that the Bill should go further, as I
think do all noble Lords who took part in this debate. I am
pleased to hear the Minister say in her introduction that there
will be longer-term reforms, such as a commitment to explore
further reforms, including the potential for annual revaluations
in future. That is something that the Labour Party has been
calling for. We welcome and support the Government’s ambitions in
this respect but we need something to happen as well. These
should not just be commitments to explore; we need to see what
the outcomes will be and to learn when we will see them.
I apologise for the large number of questions I asked. I will be
very happy for the Minister to write to me ahead of Committee on
any that she cannot respond to today. We have quite a lot of
issues to explore further.
7.51pm
(Con)
My Lords, it is a pleasure to close the debate, and it has been a
pleasure to listen to such thoughtful contributions. The noble
Baroness opposite is absolutely right: I have got a lot of
questions. I am bound not to remember all of them, but I will
write a letter afterwards to make sure that everything is set. I
will also offer more meetings, if noble Lords would like them,
before Committee.
It is right that we strive towards the best possible business
rates system: one that balances the needs of the taxpayer with
the importance of sustainable services in local communities. It
has to be a balance. A lot has been said about business rates
being too high, but, as we know, if business rates go down, so
does the money that local authorities get. We need to get the
balance right.
The Government’s review of business rates considered how to
improve the tax from a range of angles, and this Bill makes a
series of significant improvements which will have considerable
benefits for those who pay the tax and those who rely on it. As I
said, I am very grateful for the contributions that have been
made. I will try to answer as many of the questions as I possibly
can, with my many bits of paper.
The noble Lord, , the noble and learned Lord,
, and many others have
suggested that we adopt a short evaluation cycle of one or two
years. As I set out in my opening speech, we are happy to
consider this carefully in future, once the reforms in the Bill
have been implemented. However, it is vital that we approach
these changes sequentially to ensure that we can deliver more
frequent revaluations and avoid destabilising the tax. If we go
too fast, that is what might happen.
The noble Lord, , asked whether we could
increase the threshold in the small business rate relief scheme
or otherwise reduce the multiplier. The Government’s generous
small business rate relief scheme already sees over a third of
properties pay no business rates at all, and that is worth £2.1
billion per year. Further increases in the threshold for the SBRR
would be a broad-based and indiscriminate way to provide support,
and would therefore be a poorly targeted type of relief. However,
the noble Lord welcomed the considerable support we are providing
to businesses under the existing schemes, and obviously we will
keep them under review.
The noble Lord, , the noble Earl, , and the noble Baronesses, Lady
Pinnock and Lady Thornhill, and others asked about the
transparency and performance of the VOA. If there are any
changes, it is important that it can take those changes, work
with them and deliver. I assure noble Lords that the VOA will
continue to publish targets for its timeliness under the new
system and measure performance against them. Current targets
cover timeliness on maintenance reports and the check stage of
the appeals process. While the new targets will be informed by
the development of the new system, the Government are very clear
that these must be both ambitious and deliverable. The VOA must
deliver on those targets.
The noble Lord, , referred to the role of land
values in the tax such as it is. The Government consider that the
arguments in favour of a land value tax are not supported by the
evidence. A land value tax would also inevitably increase the tax
burden for properties on large pieces of land, such as golf
courses or farms, whereas densely developed land, such as that of
the Shard, would see lower bills. I understand that he indicated
his support for the tax based on rates, which is how business
rates work, and I welcome that observation from him.
The noble Earl, , the noble and learned Lord,
, the noble Baroness, Lady
Thornhill, and others asked how we have framed improvement relief
and whether it will in fact provide the incentive for property
investment—this is very important. The relief is designed to help
occupiers make improvements to their existing premises, rather
than subsidising general commercial property development. The
Government consider that a 12-month relief will allow time for
the benefits of the property investments to flow through into
businesses. We will keep this under review; in particular, we
will review this scheme in 2028.
The noble Earl, , asked whether we had assessed
the impacts of the new duties. We have carefully considered the
impact of the duties on businesses and published two impact notes
to outline the estimated costs of complying with the new duty.
The VOA estimates the cost of the new information duty to be £35
per ratepayer each year. The current system costs ratepayers £15,
so this is an increase of £20 each year. The HMRC duty for tax
reference number is estimated to be about £2 for most businesses,
and no more than £6 in those cases where finding a suitable tax
reference number takes a bit longer.
The noble Earl, , asked whether guidance will be
available to help ratepayers comply with these duties. As I said,
the Government will not formally activate the VOA duty until we
are absolutely satisfied that ratepayers can reasonably and
efficiently comply with it through the online service. Guidance
and support will be offered to those engaged in the soft launch
of the system. As is the purpose of the soft launch, the guidance
will be developed as we learn from engagement with users.
The noble and learned Lord, , raised concerns about those
eligible for the 100% relief and whether they should be subject
to these duties. Information collected by the VOA on a specific
property is often used in the valuation of other comparable
properties, many of which may not receive 100% relief. For
instance, a small independently owned shop which pays no rates
would have to pay business rates if it were occupied by a large
chain, such as Co-op. It is important that we have all that
information collected for all properties. However, as I said, we
will not formally active the duty until we are absolutely
satisfied that all ratepayers, including those getting 100%
relief, can reasonably and efficiently comply with it.
The noble and learned Lord, , the noble Baroness, Lady
Thornhill, and others set out why the level of business rates is
considered too high. As I said, business rates are an essential
form of funding for local government, providing vital public
services and supporting the Government’s levelling-up agenda. The
Government have taken action to hold the tax rate steady over the
last three years, protecting businesses from inflationary
pressures at a cost of around £3 billion each year from 2023-24.
Given the difficult fiscal position, it would not be responsible
to cut the rate further, with a 1p cut costing approximately £600
million per year.
The noble Baroness, Lady Thornhill, asked whether the VOA would
be able to cope with the reforms. The VOA has plans in place to
enable the delivery of the reforms in the Bill; the Government
have invested to make that change a reality, with £0.5 billion
for the VOA as part of the spending review; this includes funding
for important changes to upgrade IT infrastructure and digital
capabilities.
The noble Lord, , spoke about the transparency
of the VOA’s work. The Government committed in the 2020 business
rates review to reforming the VOA’s processes to make them more
transparent. The duty contained in the Bill is essential for the
VOA to implement its offer of improving transparency, and we
remain committed to that aim.
The noble Lord also raised important points about the danger of
rogue agents, as did other noble Lords. I can assure him that we
will be consulting on agent behaviour as part of the avoidance
and evasion consultation. As he notes, the majority of agents are
legitimate organisations that are typically registered with one
of the main professional bodies that he mentioned and provide a
valuable service to their clients. Nevertheless, some agents seek
to take advantage of their clients or actively to promote rate
mitigation strategies. The consultation will, therefore, seek to
understand the nature and scale of these issues and identify
potential actions that the Government can take to help address
these practices. While I am on this subject, I wish the noble
Lord a very good day tomorrow. I hope that he will feel much
better after it.
I move on to important points raised by the noble Baroness, Lady
Pinnock, and all other noble Lords. All brought up the issue that
the Government have not addressed the imbalanced treatment of the
high street and online businesses. We recognise the concerns that
people have raised and we have taken significant steps to tackle
this. The Government looked at the case for taxing businesses
differently, through our review of business rates and through a
separate consultation on an online sales tax. Our review made it
clear that people were not supportive of penalising specific
sectors or properties through business rates. The Government
reviewed the feedback that they received from stakeholders over
the online sales tax consultation period and announced at the
Autumn Statement of 2022 their decision not to proceed with such
a tax.
In summary, the evidence received suggested that an online sales
tax would have been extremely complex to design and implement and
would create undue administrative burdens for businesses. This
includes challenges of defining the boundaries between what is
online and what is instore retail, including the knotty issue of
click and collect, which came up. Rather than penalising
innovative online businesses, we have chosen to focus on
supporting those high street businesses most in need, with an
improved relief for retail, hospitality and leisure businesses,
worth £2.1 billion this year, offering 75% off bills up to a cash
cap. That is the way we have decided to do it.
The noble Baroness, Lady Pinnock, also brought up the issue of
business rate consultation on avoidance. At the Spring Budget,
the Chancellor announced that the Government would consult on
business rate avoidance and evasion, and that the consultation
will look at the three or six-month period of relief available
for empty properties. Our concern is to ensure that landlords are
not avoiding paying rates, which I hope gives some reassurance.
The noble Baroness also asked about the Government reforming
empty property rates. As I said, we will consult on business
rates avoidance and evasion and look at that issue further. Our
concern is to ensure at all times that landlords are not avoiding
paying rates—that is the important part.
The noble Baronesses, Lady Pinnock and Lady Hayman of Ullock,
brought up the issue of the cost to local authorities, as did the
noble Baroness, Lady Thornhill. I am not sure about this, but I
am pretty sure that local authorities will get new burdens, if
there are new burdens—but I shall check exactly how that is going
to happen and write it in my following letter.
That is as much as I have, but I shall look at Hansard tomorrow.
I shall answer all the questions and put the answers that I have
already given in writing as well. As I said, we can meet again if
any noble Lords would like to before Committee. The changes that
the Government are making to the business rates system will help
businesses grow and prosper, and I thank noble Lords for their
basic welcome of the Bill. The Bill reforms rates so that they
more accurately reflect the property market—and we are also
addressing the perception that tax is a barrier to investment.
The changes in this Bill will lead to fairer and more accurate
bills and a more adaptive system, capable of keeping up with the
changing modern economy.
Bill read a second time.
Commitment and Order of Consideration Motion
Moved by
That the bill be committed to a Grand Committee, and that it be
an instruction to the Grand Committee that they consider the bill
in the following order: Clauses 1 to 17, Schedule, Clauses 18 to
20, Title.
Motion agreed.
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