To ask His Majesty's Government, further to the recent survey conducted by Boston Consulting Group, what steps they are taking to address the chief concerns identified by businesses, such as (1) high energy prices, and (2) taxation.
Answered on
12 March 2024
The Government is backing British business, pursuing an ambitious policy agenda to boost growth and productivity. The OBR expects that policies announced at Spring Budget 2024 and in the previous two fiscal events will increase the size of the economy by 0.7% by 2028-29. This is through increasing total hours worked by the equivalent of more than 300,000 full-time workers and boosting business investment by £14 billion.
The Government provided an unprecedented package of support for businesses with energy costs through the Energy Bill Relief Scheme (EBRS) and the Energy Bill Discount Scheme. Together these schemes have provided around £7.5 billion to businesses for energy costs. In addition, the British Industry Supercharger, announced in February 2023, will significantly reduce electricity costs for key energy intensive industries such as steel, mining, batteries, and critical minerals.
On taxation, at Autumn Statement 2023 the Government made full expensing permanent, representing a tax cut to companies of over £10bn a year, and ensuring the UK has one of the most generous capital allowances regimes in the world. The Government also abolished the obligation to pay Class 2 self-employed NICs. Both announcements demonstrate the Government’s ongoing commitment to tax simplification.
In addition, the Government recognises that accounting for VAT can be a burden on small businesses. This is why we announced at Spring Budget 2024 that the VAT threshold will be raised from £85,000 to £90,000 from 1 April 2024. At £90,000, the UK has a higher VAT registration threshold than any EU Member State and the joint highest in the OECD. This keeps the majority UK businesses out of VAT altogether.