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Autumn Statement 2023: 'Sell out' policies risk sparking more price rises, retail industry warns

The British Retail Consortium says the major employers have the most to complain about given the chancellor's announcements on minimum pay and business rates.

The shutters close on the final day of trading at the Wilko store in Barking, east London, one of the first set of Wilko stores to close down as the dramatic collapse of the high street chain takes shape. The historic retailer will shut 24 stores across the UK in the first phase of closures, with hundreds of workers at the shops set for redundancy. Picture date: Tuesday September 12, 2023. PA Photo. See PA story CITY Wilko. Photo credit should read: Yui Mok/PA Wire
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A retail industry body has criticised the chancellor - claiming his autumn statement is a "sell out" that risks forcing up the pace of price rises at the shops again.

The British Retail Consortium (BRC) said Jeremy Hunt's measures, taken together, were not enough to support struggling high streets in the run-up to a crucial Christmas that has been dogged, so far, by consumer caution.

Recent official figures showed sales volumes at COVID lockdown levels.

Politics latest: All the reaction to the chancellor's autumn statement

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Hunt: Will 'take time' to lower taxes

The BRC was particularly scathing of the chancellor's announcements on business rates - a tax, it has long argued, that is in desperate need of reform.

The chancellor confirmed that the standard multiplier for rates on high-value properties will increase in line with inflation, following a three-year freeze, at a rate of 6.7%.

Mr Hunt revealed that the small business multiplier would remain frozen - and that the 75% rates discount for retail, hospitality and leisure will all be extended for another year.

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The BRC pointed out that the discount did not apply to major chains, the largest employers, who were also being told to swallow a big rise in the national living wage at the same time.

It spoke up as supermarkets discount heavily to attract and retain customers for the festive season bonanza ahead - offers that tend to fall away after Christmas.

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Victoria Clarke, UK chief economist at Santander CIB, tells Ian King she is worried by trends in the retail sales figures.

Industry data has suggested that the practice has helped bring down grocery inflation - returning to single-digits last month for the first time since July 2022.

But BRC chief executive Helen Dickinson said the autumn statement risked an end to the trend of easing price growth given the burden its members were being asked to take.

She warned: "Retailers and their customers have been sold out by the chancellor's statement, which does not do enough to support shops, shoppers, and an industry that employs over three million people, and many more across its supply chains.

"As we enter the Christmas period, this autumn statement will serve only to renew inflationary pressures that ultimately harm households.

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"The chancellor has poured fuel on the fire spreading across our high streets with a tax hike on shops and other businesses.

"His decision to increase the business rates standard multiplier will cost retailers hundreds of millions every year.

"Rather than introduce the meaningful reforms that were promised in the government's 2019 manifesto, the Chancellor is now letting the tax spiral out of control, driving up costs just as retailers' efforts to curb inflation have started to bear fruit," she said.