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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Welsh firms face extra £80m on bills unless business rates frozen, say industry leaders

14 business leaders have written to Welsh Government Finance Minister Rebecca Evans calling for rates to be frozen at a minimum for the 2024-25 financial year

Some 15 business representative groups and industry bodies have written to Finance Minister Rebecca Evans, urging her not to increase the multiplier rate on business rates.(Image: Eleanor Cunningham/PA Wire)

Business leaders in Wales have warned that firms will face an extra £80m on their bills from next Spring unless business rates are frozen for the next 2024-25 financial year.

Some 15 business representative groups and industry bodies, including the Welsh Retail Consortium, CBI Wales, FSB Wales and the Wales Tourism Alliance, have written to Finance Minister Rebecca Evans, urging her not to increase the multiplier rate on business rates (currently 0.53 which is times rateable values).

They say that the business rate multiplier in Wales is at a 24-year high and a fifth higher than at the start of the previous decade. It also remains higher than anywhere else in Great Britain.

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If increased in line with current CPI inflation this could see ratepayers across Wales face an extra £80 million on their rates bills from next Spring. The Welsh Government will confirm its business rate and relief threshold regime for 2024-25 when it publishes its budget on December 19.

The letter to the minister says: “We fully recognise that the Welsh Government, like business, is facing its own costs and inflationary pressures at the present time. We welcome the support your Government has afforded our sectors over recent years with the freezing of the multiplier, and with rates support for the retail, leisure and hospitality sectors. And the forthcoming Reforming Local Government Finance Bill will hopefully address some of the challenges we face from a broken business rates system.

“Yet, after three and a half turbulent years of the pandemic and costs crunch the fact is trading conditions remain challenging, the cost of doing business remains elevated, and the near-term economic outlook is weak.

“We therefore ask that Welsh Ministers freeze the headline business rate multiplier – which is already at a 24-year high and the highest in Great Britain - in the coming financial year. This would aid firms with the costs crunch, help them keep down prices for customers, and support business investment and competitiveness.