Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
Tuesday 11 February 2025 12:01 am  |  Updated:  Tuesday 11 February 2025 11:10 am

Retailers unite to warn Treasury on ‘perfect storm’ of costs

By: Amber Murray

Retail Reporter

Add as a preferred source on Google
The number of insolvencies exceeded 2,000 in May.
The number of insolvencies exceeded 2,000 in May.

A heavyweight group of retailers has warned the Treasury that hundreds of thousands of jobs are at risk in the retail sector due to unsustainable cost hikes this year.

It’s the latest in a long string of warnings from the retail sector, which has been vocal about the coming damage to jobs and investment on the British high street.

The Retail Jobs Alliance (RJA), which includes Tesco, Marks & Spencer and B&Q-owner Kingfisher, warned that retailers are facing “a perfect storm” of additional costs from this April.

It said a higher national insurance bill, plus a new recycling tax and higher business rates, will see 300,000 jobs disappear by 2030.

Chief executive of M&S, Stuart Machin, said over the weekend that “retail is being raided like a piggy bank and it’s unacceptable”.

“The blunt truth is… the budget means UK retail will get smaller,” Machin wrote in The Times, adding that while Reeves’ long-term growth ambitions are welcome “action [needs to be] taken to encourage growth today”.

Andrew Griffith, Shadow Business Secretary, said: “Retailers are often the canary in the coalmine of the state of the economy. For major high street names to issue this stark warning shows that no one’s economic future is safe.

Although the Labour’s cabinet has no real experience of business, surely, they must heed the warnings and change course now.”

Retail’s ‘permacrisis’

Retail has had a rough ride since the financial crisis of 2008, with a combination of online shopping, a Covid-19 hangover and high taxes all compounding the issue, according to the Centre for Retail Research (CRR) with around 85,000 shops having closed since 2018.

With many out of the habit of high street shopping, shops have been struggling with a lack of in-store customers – even by early 2023, customer footfall was 10 per cent lower than in 2019, and in major cities the effect was more pronounced.

Brits have instead turned to experiences like meals out, city breaks, gym memberships and subscriptions to streaming services, leaving less to spend in shops.

Analysts and companies alike have argued that changes announced in the budget are only set to make the issue worse, with an already-high tax bill set to rise by £4.5bn, according to the British Retail Consortium (BRC).

The BRC attributed £2bn of this to the new packaging levy and £2.33 to higher national insurance contributions (NICs).

Retail businesses will be especially badly hit by the changes the government has made to employer NICs due a heavy reliance on part-time workers, many of whom were previously exempt from the tax as their pay didn’t reach the old threshold. The sector also has particularly low margins, of three to five per cent.

Read more

More than 80 retail bosses urge Starmer to tackle youth unemployment crisis

Labour MPs are being warned a “perfect storm” of costs facing the retail sector could see seats lost to Reform UK.

Peel Hunt has estimated that retail firms in their coverage will see pretax profit fall by an average of 7.5 per cent as a result of the Budget’s tax increase, although some will be hit much worse than others.

“Retail and hospitality are among the most exposed sectors to [budget] cost pressures,” associate director at Frontier Economics, Tim Black, said.

“In low-margin, highly competitive markets, there’s limited room to absorb higher costs – instead they’ll ultimately need to be passed on through higher prices, or cutbacks made to jobs – as a large group of retailers warned the Chancellor in November,” he added.

The high street’s antiquated tax system

High street firms have been railing against business rates, which are essentially council taxes for shops, for decades. Opponents describe them as “antiquated”, with only high street stores paying the tax and online stores paying a lower tax on warehouses.

In Labour’s inaugural Autumn budget, it announced changes to business rates: relief on the tax, which was 75 per cent, will fall to 40 per cent this April.

The tax will also increase in 2026. Business rates are based on a shop’s ‘rateable value’ which is  the yearly rent the commercial property could have been let for on the open market. The next change to business rates, on 1 April 2026, will be based on rental values as of 1 April 2024.

The government will introduce two permanently lower tax rates for retail, hospitality, and leisure properties with rateable values under £500,000 – currently around 1,900 superstores – from 2026, but it has not yet published the details of this reform.

Changes to rateable values mean many more stores will reach the £500,000 threshold.

The RJA is calling on the UK government to “remove shops from the higher rate business rates multiplier,” a spokesperson said, with the group adding it would affect ‘anchor stores’ on the high street, which tend to pull visitors in.

“This change would provide much-needed relief for at-risk stores, enabling them to reinvest in their businesses, retain staff, and grow their footprint on the high street.”

A HM Treasury spokesperson said the Government delivered a “once-in-a-Parliament budget to wipe the slate clean”, and is now “focused on going further and faster to kickstart economic growth so working people have more money in their pockets”.

“We’re levelling the playing field for high street businesses by permanently cutting business rates and removing the £110,000 cap for over 280,000 retail, hospitality and leisure business properties, while also capping corporation tax for the duration of parliament.”

The RJA was originally launched in 2022 to protest high business rates, and has been revamped this year in light of the mounting pressures facing the sector.

Read more

‘Dispiriting’: Ministers speed up crackdown on Shein and Temu – by just six months

Shein clothing display showcasing latest fashion trends in a modern retail setting

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • News

Categories

  • Business
  • Retail

People & Organisations

  • Business Rates
  • High Street
  • NICs
  • Retail
  • Tesco
  • Treasury

Trending Articles

  • Reeves’ new tax charge on cash ISAs faces fierce industry backlash

  • Revealed: Secret Treasury plan to tax State Pension before it is paid out

  • Burnham’s new chief of staff ran City firm advising Thames Water and rival Heathrow bidder

  • As it happened: Stocks recover after markets rocked by tech-sell off; US claims ‘good foundations’ of Iran deal

  • As it happened: FTSE 100 scrapes into green after Segro’s surge; Oil at pre-war levels after Trump snaps at industry

More from City PM

  • More than 80 retail bosses urge Starmer to tackle youth unemployment crisis

    Retail
    Labour MPs are being warned a “perfect storm” of costs facing the retail sector could see seats lost to Reform UK.
  • ‘Dispiriting’: Ministers speed up crackdown on Shein and Temu – by just six months

    Retail
    Shein clothing display showcasing latest fashion trends in a modern retail setting
  • Zero-hour crackdown could wipe out seasonal work, Labour warned

    Retail
    Labour MPs are being warned a “perfect storm” of costs facing the retail sector could see seats lost to Reform UK.
  • Labour warned not to kill off hybrid jobs millions rely on

    Politics
    London has defied national trends as job postings in the capital rose.
  • Matalan kicks off turnaround under new boss as retailer slashes jobs

    Retail
    Henrik Nordvall addressing a conference, wearing a suit, with a presentation screen in the background, engaging audience.
  • UK risks becoming ‘dumping ground’ for Temu and Shein, retailers warn

    Retail
    Primark store exterior showcasing modern architectural design and branded signage on a bustling shopping street.
  • Nearly half of retail workers considering quitting over mental health

    Retail
    Whitfield will replace outgoing chair Andy Higginson.
  • Heatwave boost for retailers as Brits snapped up BBQs and fans

    Retail
    Sunny beach with clear blue waters, golden sands, and scattered seashells under a bright sky, ideal for a relaxing getaway.

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM. All rights reserved.
About · Contact · Terms · Privacy