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The Bill came about following the 2020 Business Rates Review and states that there will be delivery of:
- More frequent revaluations.
- Administrative reforms to deliver a sustainable shorter revaluation cycle, which will hopefully enable more accurate rating lists and enable the disclosure of more information to ratepayers about their business rates valuations.
- Measures to support decarbonisation and investment, including a relief for low carbon heat networks and a new Improvement Relief so that, from April 2024, ratepayers will not see an increase in their rates bill from qualifying improvements made to their property for 12 months.
- Support announced by the Government at Autumn Statement 2022. This includes a three-year Transitional Relief scheme. The Bill removes the statutory requirement for revenue neutrality within transitional relief, with the removal of downwards transition.
- The Digitalising Business Rates project, which, we are told, will modernise the business rates system, improve the targeting of rates relief, generate better data for central and local government and help to improve business rates compliance.
- Improvements to the administration of business rates, including replacing RPI with CPI as the measure of inflation used in the annual indexation of the multiplier.
On the surface these changes look positive for all sectors. We have long been fans of more frequent revaluations and the removal of downwards transition, which will certainly help the retail and hospitality sectors in this current list- although ideally, we would prefer annual revaluations if rates bills are to be a more accurate reflection of rental levels.
The relief for low carbon heat networks and the new Improvement Relief scheme are also in the right direction- although we would argue limiting the relief for only 12 months is unlikely to encourage long term investment.
However, on closer inspection, Colliers has large concerns about the administrative burden put on rate payers with the new requirements for the annual provision of information and the duty to notify whereby businesses will not only need to confirm the physical details of the property on an annual basis but also provide updates on rents and lease information as well as trading information, even where there have been no changes notifications.
Failure to do so could result in some serious fines or even imprisonment for false statements. Now an additional 700,000 businesses, who currently pay no business rates due to reliefs- many of these smaller retailers and hospitality companies, will have to send information to the VOA in a bureaucratic exercise, which “won’t result in any increase in the business rates tax take- just cause an administrative headache.
Overall this bill represents a complete change around in terms of the obligations on the VOA – obligations which are now being put on the ratepayer.
The new regime requiring annual notifications and duty to notify is backed up with penalties and onerous fines, which could run into tens of thousands of pounds with the ultimate sanction of imprisonment.
Yet no similar obligations have been placed on the VOA to produce its assessments quickly and any timetable associated with transparency is silent. The government has also said nothing about speeding up the appeals system or any timetable to achieve this.
Unless the government does something about the issue of rogue surveyors, these new demands will give a green light to cowboy rating advisers taking advantage of businesses now even more unsure of how to negotiate the complex business rates system.
Meanwhile nothing has been said about tackling the real issue with business rates- that it is overburdensome and just too high a tax to be sustainable for businesses – it’s a plus 50p in the £ tax. Far from cutting business rates, as promised in the Conservative manifesto, this year’s list will show a general 7.1% increase in rateable value.
Even on the government’s figures, the retail sector alone will still be providing £6.7 billion in business rates in 2023/4 which is nearly a quarter of the overall business rates tax take, despite the fact that the gross value-added from retail to the economy is less than 10%.
Unless the Government reduces the Multiplier to levels businesses can afford- say 34p in the £ -none of the above changes will make a significant improvement for businesses in these sectors.
We will be continuing our lobbying campaign among MPS as this Bill makes its way through Parliament.
John Webber is head of business rates at Colliers
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