º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

Budget 2024: North West business leaders reveal Autumn statement wishlist

Leaders of firms across a range of sectors have highlighted key areas of concern ahead of today's announcement

Rachel Reeves will soon deliver her first Budget in the House of Commons(Image: Getty Images)

Business leaders in the North West have shared their views on the Budget ahead of Chancellor Rachel Reeves' keynote speech on Wednesday.

Representatives from the hospitality sector said venues were particularly in need of support.

Paul Askew, chef patron and owner of The Art School in Liverpool, said: "With the incoming budget there’s a crucial chance to re-set what is an increasingly dire situation in hospitality."

Mr Askew said the expectation of higher National Insurance contributions for employers and changing tax thresholds set alarm bells ringing in the hospitality sector.

He said: "There’s an ongoing climate of uncertainty with closures of all kinds of hospitality businesses each week – shutting down for good because they can’t make their businesses add up any more. Turnover remains relatively the same broadly speaking for many operators I know both here in Liverpool and around the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, but the reality is that making this turnover profitable is getting harder each day.

"We need an urgent recalibration in tax for hospitality, which generated £54bn in tax receipts in 2022. In Liverpool, the tourism industry – with hospitality forming a huge part – was worth £6.25bn in 2023. For a city with hospitality in its DNA, we need to increase this each year; the question remains how do we here, and across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, make this happen?

"Because we continue to face an incredibly demanding, draining and difficult set of circumstances. So unless the government really listens, we will see more closures and more redundancies. How many other fresh food-led businesses need to close to make the new government realise that they aren't allowing the hospitality industry to grow, invest, employ and quite frankly survive?

"Unless swift action is taken, the sector is gearing to fail with post-Covid support long gone but the debts very much remaining, along with the ongoing lack of consumer confidence. And it’s not just restaurants – pubs, cafes, bars and more all face the most difficult trading landscape imaginable, with the perfect set of circumstances for failure."