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Enterprise

Labour's tax hikes crash business confidence, firms warn of tougher times ahead

The CBI said that average selling prices hit 32% - over double of its long-run average of 14% - as the double whammy of both cost and price pressures ramped up in the services sector

Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves(Image: PA)

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ business confidence took a nosedive in the three months leading up to May as tax increases, introduced by Rachel Reeves, started to take effect, with firms now warning of further difficulties ahead.

Optimism among consumer services has now been in decline for eight consecutive months, currently standing at -42%, while business value levels plummeted to -56%, a significant drop from -44% in February, as reported by .

In the meantime, average selling prices skyrocketed to 32%, more than double the long-term average of 14%.

Business and professional services saw a decline in optimism to -43%, compared to -28% in February, as per the CBI's Sector Services Survey, which gathered data from 215 firms, utilizing percentage indicators to highlight key business trends, such as costs, sales, and hiring.

Alpesh Paleja, CBI's Deputy Chief Economist, stated: "Businesses continue to cite the impact of higher employer NICs and the National Living Wage both hitting their own cost base and depressing demand from clients."

Survey respondents expressed concerns about the challenges ahead, with business and professional services anticipating a decline in profitability to -47% over the next three months, following a -34% decline in the three months leading up to May.

In the consumer services sector, there are expectations of further job cuts, with the number of employees predicted to drop to -36% over the next quarter. The Chancellor has raised employer's national insurance contributions by 1.2 percentage points to 15%, with the changes set to take effect in April.

Additionally, the national living wage saw an increase to £12.21 from £11.44.