We voted for change, now we desperately need it in hospitality

We voted for change, now we desperately need it in hospitality

3 Nov    Finance News, Opinion

Now we have got a new chancellor and government, with the incoming budget there’s a crucial chance to re-set what is an increasingly dire situation in hospitality.

Many of us voted for change to bring this new government in. However, the expectation of increased National Insurance contributions for employers only and talk of changing tax thresholds and living wage increases sends alarm bells ringing in the hospitality sector, which desperately need recalibration.

There’s an ongoing climate of uncertainty with closures of all kinds of hospitality businesses each week – shutting down for good because they can’t make their businesses add up any more. Turnover remains relatively the same broadly speaking for many operators I know both here in Liverpool and around the UK, but the reality is that making this turnover profitable is getting harder each day.

We need an urgent recalibration in tax for hospitality, which generated £54bn in tax receipts in 2022. In Liverpool, the tourism industry – with hospitality forming a huge part – was worth £6.25bn in 2023. For a city with hospitality in its DNA, we need to increase this each year; the question remains how do we here, and across the UK, make this happen?

Because we continue to face an incredibly demanding, draining and difficult set of circumstances. So unless the government really listens, we will see more closures and more redundancies. How many other fresh food-led businesses need to close to make the new government realise that they aren’t allowing the hospitality industry to grow, invest, employ and quite frankly survive?

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Unless swift action is taken, the sector is gearing to fail with post-Covid support long gone but the debts very much remaining, along with the ongoing lack of consumer confidence. And it’s not just restaurants – pubs, cafes, bars and more all face the most difficult trading landscape imaginable, with the perfect set of circumstances for failure.

We would like to grow again and there are many obstacles preventing this growth. Some of the key pressure points are:

  • High VAT on fresh prepared food
  • Business rates relief ending – the threat of rates increasing on April 1st 2025
  • Energy costs
  • Inflation of ingredients costs
  • Wage increases
  • Increased business PAYE and NI contributions
  • Brexit tariffs on import of wine and international goods
  • Cost of borrowing
  • Servicing of CBIL loans businesses were forced to take out during the pandemic to survive

The single most important point is to recalibrate the VAT charge on fresh prepared food to be in line with Europe for fresh led businesses so we can grow, invest and thrive using artisan skills and develop our people and business normally, not just scraping through week by week. There’s a chorus of businesses across the UK asking for this.

And we need business rates reform to create a level playing field for businesses with physical premises on the high street compared to online businesses and dark kitchens. It makes no sense how business rates are currently assessed and the fees levied, on top of the potential end to business rates relief next spring which would be another crippling blow.

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We voted for change. Now we desperately need it in hospitality. I really hope the chancellor and government are listening.


Paul Askew

Paul Askew

Paul Askew is one of the UK’s most pioneering figures in hospitality. Chef Patron and owner for the last 9 years of The Art School in Liverpool, Paul creates classic and innovative fine-dining experiences whilst working with many excellent young chefs under his tutelage. His focus remains fixed on bringing the highest standard of gastronomy to Liverpool and to showcase just how far the city can go. Paul continues to achieve the city region ever more recognition, wedded to the field to fork philosophy which embraces sustainability and seasonality at The Art School. Over the last 2 years, Paul has cooked away from his kitchen for the G7 delegation in December 2021, recreated The Art School at The Grand National in Aintree in April 2022 and 2023, The Turner Prize December 2022 and is the patron of the recent Taste Liverpool. Drink Bordeaux festival which returns to the city in summer 2024. As part of his wider work, Paul is a fellow of the Royal Academy of Culinary Arts and their Chairman for the North of England and a Disciple of Escoffier. He is also part of a collective of chefs who opened the intimate Scouse brasserie in Liverpool, Barnacle, in December 2021, to great acclaim.

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