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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Tourism leaders ask Chancellor to bring back tax-free shopping

Association of International Retail says move could bring £5bn in spending to areas beyond London

Tourism leaders want Jeremy Hunt to restore tax-free shopping

Business and tourism leaders are asking Chancellor Jeremy Hunt to bring back tax-free shopping for overseas visitors to boost local economies by hundreds of millions of pounds.

The Association of International Retail is calling for the return of tax-free shopping, saying the move could bring billions into the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy. It says the measure would “restore the £1.5bn loss of spending by non-EU visitors and create a unique new EU shopping-led tourism market worth £10bn annually.”

£5bn of that new EU market spending would be outside London, and that airside tax-free shopping could generate £2bn “with much of that spent in regional airports”. It estimates that £10bn EU market could support 200,000 retail, hospitality and travel jobs.

That call has been backed by business and leisure leaders in Liverpool city region, Cheshire and Warrington - who have also written to the Chancellor to urge him to make the tax change in his Budget statement in March.

The letter from Liverpool to Jeremy Hunt is signed by Bill Addy, CEO of Liverpool BID Company, Lucy O'Shaughnessy, commercial director at Liverpool John Lennon Airport, Jennina O’Neill, centre manager at Metquarter and chair of the city’s Retail & Leisure BID, Donna Howitt, place strategy director at Liverpool One; and Marcus Magee, general manager at Hilton Liverpool and chair of Liverpool Hospitality.

It talks about Liverpool’s strong visitor economy and appeal to international businesses.

And it says: “Tax-free international shopping is a valuable aspect of this. We can see the impact of this on our spend data. The total International Spend in Q3 of 2023 is down -10.5% compared to Q3 of 2022. International tourist spend outside of Europe has dropped -34.6% in Q3. This lack of international tourist spend outside of Europe is being impacted greatly by the lack of tourists from the Middle East. For example, we have seen a -48% decrease in spend from Saudi Arabia which attributes to £493k in spend. We can also see a decrease in spend in Kuwait (-73.7%) which attributes to £469k worth of spend.

“The re-introduction of tax-free shopping would provide a much needed boost to our city centre economy translating to valuable jobs, and economic self-sufficiency. It would increase footfall in key destinations within the city centre, boosting the city’s visitor economy and tourism spend.