Giving his initial reaction to the Autumn Budget, Dr Adam Marshall,
Director General of the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC), said:
“Chamber business communities wanted the Chancellor to focus on
the basics - rates, roads, and ringtones - and will be pleased
that they will see some action on all three fronts.
“While more remains to be done to reduce the impact of business
rates on investment and growth, the Chancellor’s decisions will
lessen the impact of rate rises on hard-pressed firms in many
parts of the country from next April. Chambers campaigned hard
for a reduction in the relentless rises of this iniquitous tax,
and will be pleased that the Chancellor has listened and reduced
the burden.
"Commitments to delivering road and rail infrastructure, and
working to improve mobile phone signals on key transport
corridors, will help support local business productivity.
“Our business communities will welcome the Chancellor’s marked
focus on helping places achieve their potential. The announcement
of new trains for the Tyne and Wear metro, new tax arrangements
for the North Sea oil industry, devolution deals for many of our
major cities including Belfast, and housing growth in the
Oxford-Cambridge corridor all respond directly to key local
business needs. The collective, real-world impact of these and
other targeted interventions could be significant.
“Despite the inclusion of a number of announcements that will
support business communities in the short term, more will still
need to be done over the coming months to lay the groundwork for
a successful Brexit transition. Businesses will expect greater
boldness from the Chancellor - and more radical support for
infrastructure and investment - once a Brexit transition period
is secured and the shape of a UK-EU deal becomes clearer.”