Cosmetics company Lush and car repair chain Kwik Fit are among firms which have warned they will raise prices due to an increase in employers' National Insurance (NI). Other firms have told the BBC they will reduce how much profit they make, freeze hiring or in some cases cut jobs to cover the higher costs. From Sunday, employers will have to pay NI at 15% on salaries above £5,000, instead of 13.8% on salaries above £9,100 currently. The Treasury said the billions raised will be spent on public services, including the NHS. Lush told the BBC that with 3,600 employees in the UK and Ireland, it would have to find an extra £2.7m per year. Kasey Swithenbank, Lush's retail head for the UK and Ireland, said: "We are going to be taking small incremental price changes. "We are taking an approach where we look at certain categories at key points of the year so hopefully our customers don't feel the full burden straight away." Kwik Fit, which employs about 5,000 people, estimates the NICs rises will cost it £5m. This will have a knock-on effect on prices, and recruitment, said Mark Slade, its managing director. "We are really careful to make sure KwikFit is always competitive and benchmarked against the people around us - but the reality is that includes increasing prices." He added: "There will be some people who aren't replaced over the coming year and that will be in the senior levels." BBC Breakfast contacted around 200 UK businesses and charities in March, across different industries, from sole traders to large companies to get a sense of the impact of the increase in employer National Insurance Contributions. Some 121 completed the questionnaire and around 100 of these businesses told us they had at least an approximate idea of how much increases in employer NICSs would cost them. The costs ranged from £1,000 to £39m depending the size of the business and the number of employees. Around 60 of the businesses which were planning to increase the staff count before announcement said the Budget had affected these plans. BBC Breakfast's questionnaire asked employers to choose from a list of actions they would take to manage increases in NICs. Businesses most frequently told us they would choose a combination of these things. Allison Kirkby, chief executive of BT, said the tax changes, which will cost the firm £100m, will mean it speeds up job cuts it was already planning. She added that BT is "delighted" with tax relief on infrastructure investment in the Spring Statement and UK planning reforms. "At the moment, like the country, we are focused on getting BT back to growth," she said. "Predictability on taxation, on regulation and on planning is super helpful for the investment that goes into infrastructure like ours, which is the digital backbone of the country." Angela Burns is the chief executive of the Webb Hotel Group, a group of four hotels based in Sutton Coldfield in the West Midlands. It employs just under 300 people, and she says the NICs rises alone will cost £200,000 a year, with additional minimum wage and pension costs taking that to £600,000. "It's really tough because our labour force is the main expense in our business," she said. "As soon as it was announced in the budget in October, we started to look at restructuring, and as people have left, we haven't re-employed. So we've actually cut our workforce down from about 320 to about 280 now to prepare ourselves." She said prices would have to be moved "slightly upwards". "But it's a balancing act as to what customers are prepared to pay," she added. Greg Strickland, general manager of trampoline activity firm Jump Xtreme in Bolton, said the changes added £30,000 of costs "overnight". He said it had cut 16 hours per week off some 40-hour contracts to cover the cost. Meanwhile Andrew Lane, managing director of Union Industries in Leeds said the firm, which makes industrial doors, shares about half its post-tax profit with employees. "This is going to hit them," he said. "There will be less money to distribute to our employee-owners." The government has predicted the changes will raise between £14.6bn and £18.3bn a year over five years when compensation for public sector employers is taken into account. A Treasury spokesperson told the BBC the government was "pro-business" and that it knew the "vital importance of small businesses to our economy". They said October's budget "took difficult decisions on tax to stabilise the public finances, including the NHS which has now seen waiting lists fall five months in a row". They added: "We are now focused on creating opportunities for businesses to compete and access the finance they need to scale, export and break into new markets." Additional reporting by Oliver Smith & Jennifer Meierhans Get our flagship newsletter with all the headlines you need to start the day.Sign up here.
Lush and Kwik Fit warn tax rise will push up prices
TruthLens AI Suggested Headline:
"Lush and Kwik Fit Announce Price Increases Due to National Insurance Hike"
TruthLens AI Summary
Lush, a well-known cosmetics company, and Kwik Fit, a prominent car repair chain, have both announced that they will need to raise prices due to an increase in employers' National Insurance (NI) contributions. Starting Sunday, the NI rate will rise from 13.8% to 15% on salaries exceeding £5,000, a change that is expected to significantly impact businesses. Lush, which employs 3,600 people across the UK and Ireland, estimates that the cost of the increased NI will amount to an additional £2.7 million annually. Kasey Swithenbank, Lush's UK and Ireland retail head, indicated that the company plans to implement small incremental price adjustments throughout the year to mitigate the immediate financial burden on customers. Kwik Fit, with approximately 5,000 employees, predicts that the NI increase will cost the company around £5 million, leading to necessary adjustments in pricing and hiring practices, as stated by its managing director, Mark Slade. He noted that while the company strives to remain competitive, the reality necessitates price increases and potential job cuts at senior levels to manage operational costs effectively.
The broader impact of the National Insurance hike has been echoed by various businesses across the UK. A survey conducted by BBC Breakfast revealed that many firms are considering various strategies to cope with the increased costs, including profit reductions, hiring freezes, and job cuts. For instance, Allison Kirkby, CEO of BT, mentioned that the tax changes would accelerate planned job cuts while also expressing satisfaction with tax relief on infrastructure investments. Angela Burns, CEO of the Webb Hotel Group, estimated an annual cost increase of £600,000 due to the NI rise, prompting her company to restructure its workforce and raise prices slightly. Additionally, Andrew Lane, managing director of Union Industries, highlighted the adverse effects on employee profit-sharing due to the increased costs. The government anticipates that the changes will generate between £14.6 billion and £18.3 billion annually over the next five years, aiming to stabilize public finances and support essential services like the NHS. A Treasury spokesperson emphasized the government's pro-business stance and the importance of small businesses to the economy, assuring that they are focused on creating opportunities for growth and competition.
TruthLens AI Analysis
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