Half of CBI members are looking to cut jobs after huge Budget tax raid
by JAMES TAPSFIELD, POLITICAL EDITOR FOR MAILONLINE · Mail OnlineBusinesses are on a collision course with Labour today as they warn of the damage from the monster Budget tax raid.
The CBI is using its conference to sound the alarm on the £25billion hike to employer National Insurance.
A survey of members has found that half are now looking to cut jobs, while two-thirds are slashing recruitment plans.
Chief executive Rain Newton-Smith insisted industries such as retail and hospitality have been pushed into 'crisis containment', while other sectors are now focusing on 'damage control' rather than investment following the hit to their bottom line.
She reminded Rachel Reeves that profit is 'not a dirty word' and growth is impossible unless business is allowed to prosper.
Ms Newton-Smith said firms had been caught 'off guard' by the NICs increase and would find it harder to 'take a chance' on investing, while farmers were 'fearful' after the inheritance tax changes.
'Tax rises like these must never again simply be done to business,' she said.
However, the Chancellor is expected to signal defiance when she appears at the conference this afternoon - arguing that there is 'no alternative' to increasing the tax burden.
Be the first to commentBe one of the first to commentComments
Do you agree that recent tax hikes will lead to job cuts?
Comment now
Businesses bore the brunt of £40billion of tax rises unveiled last month. Some firms also face rising costs as a result of an increase in the minimum wage and new employment rights.
In her keynote speech, Ms Newton-Smith welcomed the political stability brought by Labour's huge majority but warn that the Government's vision for growth remains 'in the distance'.
Ms Newton-Smith said business had been 'caught off guard' by the scale of the changes to employers' NI.
'Profits aren't just extra money for companies to stuff in a pillowcase,' she said. 'Profits are investment. When you hit profits, you hit competitiveness, you hit investment, you hit growth.'
Ms Reeves has declared that economic growth is her 'top priority' and insists Labour will meet its manifesto pledge to make the UK the fastest growing economy in the G7.
But the Office for Budget Responsibility downgraded its growth forecasts for the final years of the decade in the wake of the Budget.
Official figures covering the first three months of Labour's tenure show growth fell to 0.1 per cent, down from 0.5 per cent the previous quarter.
Keir Starmer acknowledged the growth figures were 'not good enough' and pledged to redouble efforts to boost investment. Ms Newton-Smith will also warn that the Budget has placed a 'heavy burden' on businesses looking to invest.
'When firms I speak to want to be creating more opportunities, more investment, more training in their local communities...instead so many – especially in retail and hospitality – have gone into crisis containment,' she is set to say.
'Even where the risk isn't critical, firms that have been through really tough years are now in damage control again.
'They are looking with heavy hearts to cut training and investment, delay decarbonisation projects, or pass on costs to customers.'
The CBI's warning is the latest to raise concerns about Labour's stewardship of the economy.
A monthly business survey has suggested that activity across the UK's private sector contracted in the first weeks of November amid a drop in firms' confidence.
Retailers including Tesco, Sainsbury's and Marks & Spencer also say they will face a £7billion hike in their costs due to the Budget policy changes and that job losses are 'inevitable'.