That is an interesting point about empty property taxes. I will not address it in my speech, but it undoubtedly deserves examination and should be investigated further to see what impact it has on businesses.
Let me make it clear: I have yet to hear a single retail voice supporting the Government’s proposal to cancel next year’s revaluation. The Minister seems to think that he is right and everyone else is wrong. If he can identify somebody who supports the revaluation, I would be interested to hear who it is.
To put it bluntly, the business rates revaluation postponement is no way to do government. The decision to postpone next year’s revaluation of business rates has compounded the sense of injustice already felt by retailers and other businesses. To add insult to injury, the Minister has defended the policy by saying on radio that it is simply like being locked into a fixed-rate mortgage. What he did not tell radio listeners is that it is like a fixed-rate mortgage with an interest rate set at more than 40% for many customers. The Government must think that businesses are daft. Current business rates are based on rents that were set close to the property boom peak in 2008. Since then, property prices have fallen by up to 40% in many parts of the north and elsewhere in the country.