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Cost to business of rate change Print E-mail
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Friday, 13 April 2007

The abolition of the Uniform Business rate cost Scottish businesses an extra £900m since 2000, SNP leader Alex Salmond claimed yesterday.

Speaking at the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) ‘Scotland Question Time’ debate in Edinburgh last night, Salmond said that figures acquired following a Freedom of Information (FOI) request to the Local Government Finance Division of the Finance and Central Services Department showed that the decision to abolish the Uniform Business rate, made by First Minister Jack McConnell when he was Finance Minister, cost Scottish businesses an extra £900m between 2000-01 and 2006-07.

The FOI response stated that: "If there had been a uniform business rate with England approximately £900m less NDRI would have been collected over the period 2000-01 and 2006-07."

Salmond said: "The SNP wants Scotland's small businesses to be freed from the burden of business rates so they are free to grow and provide more and better paid jobs in local communities.

"Yet under Mr McConnell's stewardship they have been disadvantaged because of his decision as Finance Minister to make them pay more in business rates than business south of the Border.

"By imposing a rate poundage on Scottish business 10.1 per cent higher than south of the Border, the current Scottish Executive has added to the burdens on Scottish business and held back Scottish economic growth.

"The SNP are determined to support the small business sector which has been let down under the current administration. Small businesses have traditionally been important to the economy for a variety of reasons:

as a source of entrepreneurship and innovation; a driver of competition and local economic vibrancy; and as a mechanism for job creation.

"That's why we will implement our Small Business Bonus scheme which is designed to target small businesses, and deliver meaningful help to them, while at the same time benefiting the wider economy.

"Under our proposals 3 out of 4 businesses will be better off: 120,000 businesses in Scotland will have their business rates abolished and a further 30,000 businesses will have their rates significantly reduced as a result of the scheme.”
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