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Economic Development

North East business leaders deliver mixed reaction to Winter Budget

Newcastle BID company NE1 Ltd says the Budget piles more pressure on city centre businesses, but the Chamber says there is 'cause for guarded optimism'

Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves(Image: Leon Neal, Getty Images)

North East business leaders have delivered a mixed response to the Chancellor’s budget, with some hailing it for cementing commitment to regional growth while others say it threatens to leave the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ “stuck in neutral”.

Rachel Reeves’s second Budget – revealed ahead of time in the accidental early publication by the Office for Budget Responsibility – laid out a series of tax rises Ms Reeves is introducing to fill a black hole in the public finances, alongside the launch of measures designed to encourage investment and put money in the pockets of workers.

Speaking in the House of Commons, the Chancellor described the package as “the right choices for a fairer, a stronger and more secure Britain” as she unveiled a £26bn-a-year tax increase. The Chancellor’s measures included a new tax on homes valued over £2m, the end of the two-child benefit limit and a freeze on income tax thresholds.

Stephen Patterson, CEO of Newcastle BID company, which represents the interests of 1,300 businesses in Newcastle city centre said the budget heaps more pressure on the retail and leisure sectors.

He said: “There has been no shot in the arm for businesses or the economy with a budget that takes more from the wages of working people and adds to the financial pressures on businesses.

“With no tax cuts for working people, and a freeze on income tax thresholds for the next three years, there will be less disposable income and salary to spend. This doesn’t bode well for the towns and city centres still reeling from last year’s budget, and there was no respite in today’s announcement, with additional burdens placed on businesses with the increase in the minimum wage.

“This puts extra pressure on sectors like retail and hospitality, which are already struggling under significant pressure. In the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, on average, one pub closes every day, and closer to home in Newcastle, 16 hospitality venues have closed since the last budget.

“With the last two budgets, the Government has chosen to take over £70bn out of the economy, meaning that times are going to be tight for businesses and finding the money for investment and growth is going to be difficult.”