UK Parliament / Open data

Business Rates

Proceeding contribution from Brandon Lewis (Conservative) in the House of Commons on Tuesday, 30 October 2012. It occurred during Adjournment debate on Business Rates.

At the moment, the estimate is done across the country. We are looking at publishing these estimates, but what the Valuation Office Agency can and will publish is a matter for the VOA. We are looking to ensure that that is resolved before the Bill’s Second Reading on Monday.

Postponing the 2015 revaluation in England will avoid local firms and local shops having to face unexpected hikes in their business rate bills during the next five years. As business rates are linked to inflation, there will be no real-terms increase in rates over the period. The reform therefore provides certainty for businesses to plan and invest, supporting local economic growth.

Since the last revaluation, which was based on 2008 valuations, the economy and property market have faced exceptional changes. A revaluation at this point would therefore be likely to result in sharp changes to business rate bills in many parts of the country and in many sectors. Tax stability is vital to businesses that are

looking to grow and to help improve the economy. The Government are committed to maintaining up-to-date rate bills through regular five-yearly revaluations, which will resume, as I said, after 2017.

We can look only at estimates for the revaluation in 2015, because the detailed work has not yet started. The estimates have been prepared by the Valuation Office Agency and are based on professional judgments informed by limited rental market evidence up to January 2012. They suggest that many smaller and medium-sized firms would have seen rate increases in 2015. Overall, the estimates suggest, as I have said, that 800,000 premises would have had a real-terms increase in their rates from a 2015 revaluation. The retail sector, some parts of which have criticised our decision to postpone the revaluation, would have faced big hikes in bills in 2015.

Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
552 cc18-9WH 
Session
2012-13
Chamber / Committee
Westminster Hall
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