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Retail & Consumer

Fuller's boss warns of 'unintended consequences' of rampant tax hikes

The London-listed pub firm known as Fuller's said the changes to employers' national insurance contributions (NICs) announced in the budget "will cause particular pain"

Fullers brewery in Chiswick(Image: Steve Parsons/PA Wire)

The CEO of pub chain Fuller, Smith and Turner, Michael Turner, has issued a stark warning about the impact of recent tax hikes on the hospitality sector, cautioning that it will fuel inflation and push businesses "to the wall".

Turner, who chairs the London-listed company known as Fuller's, expressed concern that the alterations to employer's national insurance contributions (NICs) outlined in the budget "will cause particular pain" and were the result of the Chancellor's ill-advised pledge not to raise taxes on individuals, as reported by .

Chancellor Rachel Reeves raised the amount employers must contribute to NICs by 1.2 per cent, while also reducing the wage threshold at which employers must start paying the tax from £9,100 to £5,000.

This change will predominantly impact sectors that are heavily dependent on labour, such as hospitality and agriculture. The hospitality industry will be further hit by the threshold alteration, as many businesses in this sector rely significantly on part-time workers who were previously exempt from the tax.

Turner argued that "the Chancellor's actions are a direct attack on those labour-intensive industries that are the lifeblood of our economy, whilst leaving the large City institutions, that can afford to pay their share, almost completely untouched."

"The unintended consequences of these actions will be to drive inflation higher, put pressure on wages, and will drive many businesses to the wall," Turner warned, expressing hope that the government would reconsider its decisions.

A bartender pulling a pint of Fuller's London Pride beer in a pub next to the Fuller's Griffin Brewery in Chiswick(Image: Daniel Leal/AFP/Getty Images)

Following the announcement of a rise in employers' NICs, Reeves revealed an increase in the National Minimum Wage by 6.7 per cent.

Chief Executive Simon Emeny expressed concerns on BBC Radio 4 this morning, stating: "We still haven't fully recovered profits post-Covid", and highlighted that "the cost increases that were announced two weeks ago in the budget will impact significantly across the sector."