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UK retailers warn of price hikes, job losses from budget changes, urge finance minister to address £7b cost surge
Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves poses with the red budget box outside her office on Downing Street in London, Britain October 30, 2024. Britain’s biggest retailers have written to finance minister Rachel Reeves to warn her that last month’s budget will make both higher prices and job losses a certainty and dent investment. — Reuters pic
  • Seventy-nine retail bosses sign letter to finance minister
  • Say retail faces £7 billion in extra annual costs from 2025
  • Want to work with government to find solution

LONDON, Nov 19 — Britain’s biggest retailers have written to finance minister Rachel Reeves to warn her that last month’s budget will make both higher prices and job losses a certainty and dent investment.

The letter, coordinated by the British Retail Consortium trade body and signed by 79 retail bosses, including those at Tesco, Marks & Spencer, Sainsbury’s, Next, Asda, Morrisons, Kingfisher, Amazon UK and Boots, called for a meeting with Reeves to discuss their concerns and work on a solution. The Labour government’s October 30 budget statement raised employers’ National Insurance, or social security, contributions by 1.2 percentage points to 15 per cent from April next year, and also lowered the threshold for when firms start paying to £5,000 from £9,100 (RM28,344 to RM51,586) per year. It also raised the minimum wage for most adults by 6.7 per cent from April.

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The letter said the UK retail industry, which has three million direct jobs and 2.7 million more in its supply chain, was facing a rise of £7 billion in annual costs from 2025 when higher business rates and the impact of new packaging levies are also taken into account.

"It will not be possible to absorb such significant cost increases over such a short time scale. The effect will be to increase inflation, slow pay growth, cause shop closures, and reduce jobs, especially at the entry level,” it said.

The retailers want the government to phase the introduction of the new lower earnings threshold for National Insurance, delay the introduction of packaging levies, and revisit and bring forward proposed changes to business rates.

On Saturday, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he would defend decisions taken in the budget "all day long”. — Reuters

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