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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Supermarket bosses lead call to hit online retailers with sales tax to help save the High Street

Levelling the playing field over business rates for bricks-and-mortar retailers and online rivals has been a hot topic for some time

Tesco Metro on New George Street, Plymouth(Image: Joe Hocking)

Tesco has called for a 1% online sales tax to be slapped on digital retail giants such as Amazon ahead of the spring Budget.

It comes as bosses at º£½ÇÊÓÆµ supermarkets, high street chains and retail property owners call on the Chancellor for an overhaul of the current tax system to put them on a “level playing field” with online rivals.

Tesco boss Ken Murphy is among 18 bosses to sign a letter to Rishi Sunak calling for a permanent reduction in business rates in the March 3 Budget.

Retailers, leisure and hospitality firms have not had to pay rates for the current financial year after the Government launched a rates holiday at the onset of the pandemic.

But business rates are currently set to restart in April for the new financial year despite non-essential retailers remaining shut due to lockdown restrictions.

A significant number of essential retailers, including the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s six largest supermarket chains, handed their rates relief back to the state, in a move worth more than £2 billion.

Retailers have now said that failure to reform the rates system in the next Budget “will hamper the recovery of the retail sector post-pandemic, potentially putting thousands of jobs at risk”.