Image montre une pub redondante après la fermeture en raison de la charge fiscale mises en œuvre sur des maisons libres partout en Grande-Bretagne. Photo:Jeff Gilbert
2911 x 4367 px | 24,6 x 37 cm | 9,7 x 14,6 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
3 septembre 2010
Lieu:
Emma Hamilton Pub, Kingston Road, Wimbledon Chase, London, England, United Kingdom
Informations supplémentaires:
A record 2, 000 British pubs have closed with the loss of 20, 000 jobs since the chancellor, Alistair Darling, increased beer tax in the 2008 budget, new figures published by the British Beer and Pub Association reveal today. The figures came alongside a separate forecast by Oxford Economics that 75, 000 more jobs in the drinks industry are at risk. The finding is based on the impact of last year's 18% increase in excise duty and the implications of the four-year drinks tax escalator. The two beer tax increases placed an additional £520m cost burden on the sector, the data show. Publication of the new figures comes on the day that five ministers are due to be questioned on the issue by MPs at a Commons emergency summit. They include the home office minister, Alan Campbell, and the treasury minister, Angela Eagle. Rob Hayward, the chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association said: "These new figures reveal the true scale of the struggle facing the beer and pub industry. "There was understandable political concern about the recent 850 job losses at (carmaker) Mini – the pub sector is losing nearly twice as many jobs every month. Furthermore, when a pub closes a family loses not only its livelihood but also its home. "The beer and pub industry is not looking for a handout, just hands off any further tax or regulation increases." He said the organisation was urging the government to abandon the 2% over inflation drinks tax escalator, due to begin in March, and pledge no further increases in excise duty in this year's budget. "We are also asking them to abandon the mandatory code in the policing crime bill , which the government says will cost the industry an extra £300m this year alone and lead to further job losses and pub closures, " Hayward said. The new mandatory code of practice for alcohol retailers, which will replace an existing voluntary code, is designed to ensure more responsible retailing of alcohol by banning many drink