Leading London businesses urge the Government to scrap the tourist tax

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BusinessLDN is today (Wednesday 26 July) calling for the immediate restoration of tax-free shopping for international visitors to boost London and the wider UK economy.

In a submission to HM Treasury, the business campaign group, BusinessLDN highlights how scrapping the tourist tax would generate £4.1bn annually for the UK economy as a whole and create an additional 78,000 jobs, according to data from Oxford Economics.

The UK is an outlier in not offering tax-free shopping for international visitors and is seriously losing out as a result. American, Chinese, and Indian visitors can claim back the VAT when they visit competitor nations in continental Europe, such as France, Spain and Italy. Figures from Global Blue show that 10% of UK spending by international shoppers in 2019 has now moved to EU countries, which have kept VAT-free shopping.

BusinessLDN is also calling on the HM Treasury to ask the Office for Budget Responsibility to undertake an urgent review of the full impact of VAT-free shopping, which would provide an independent assessment of the true costs and benefits of this measure.

John Dickie, Chief Executive at BusinessLDN, said: “The tourist tax is an economic own goal. Re-introducing the VAT reclaim scheme would boost UK’s flatlining economy through increased spending from international visitors in our shops, restaurants, hotels and more. And thanks to spending that can’t be reclaimed, the increase in spend would also deliver an extra £350 million in tax revenues for the Exchequer every year. This is a win-win for the economy, public finances and the country. We need to act now to show the world that Britain is open for business.”

Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “I have long been calling for the Government to restore tax-free shopping for international visitors. It would help to increase the number of international tourists who visit London and the United Kingdom, which in turn will provide a much-needed boost to businesses and high streets across the country – while providing billions of pounds to the Treasury each year. It is a quick way for the Government to grow the economy and support sectors that have suffered disproportionately from the pandemic and the current cost-of-living crisis.”