UK employers says Johnson's tax hike will cost jobs

  • 9/7/2021
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LONDON, Sept 7 (Reuters) - British business organisations criticised Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s plans to increase taxes to pay for health and social care reform, saying they added an unnecessary burden to firms already struggling due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Johnson set out plans on Tuesday to raise taxes on workers, employers and some investors. The announcement received a cool reception from businesses, who were asked to pay a 1.25 percentage-point increase to a payroll tax known as National Insurance (NI). “Businesses strongly oppose a rise in national insurance contributions as it will be a drag anchor on jobs growth at an absolutely crucial time,” Suren  Thiru, Head of Economics at the British Chambers of Commerce, said. “This rise will impact the wider economic recovery by landing significant costs on firms when they are already facing a raft of new cost pressures and dampen the entrepreneurial spirit needed to drive the recovery.” The tax increases also included a 1.25 percentage point rise in dividend tax rates which stands to affect business owners and investors who rely on dividend income. Manufacturers’ group Make UK echoed concerns about a dampening impact on Britain’s recovery from what was in 2020 its worst slump in more than 300 years. “Economic history tells us that job cuts are most likely when the economy starts to open again after a downturn because firms need the capital to reset,” said Chief Executive Stephen Phipson. “After witnessing large-scale redundancies at the height of the pandemic and the plug being pulled on the furlough scheme, government should be putting in place measures to protect jobs and incentivise recruitment. An increase to NI would have the opposite effect”. Reporting by William James and David Milliken Editing by William Schomberg Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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