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MPA’s calls on tax burden and infrastructure investment

In an open letter, the UK Mineral Products Association’s chief executive Nigel Jackson has responded to the speech by the UK Chancellor, George Osborne at the Mansion House Dinner in London in which the Chancellor highlighted measures taken to boost business in the UK. Jackson welcomed recent measures taken in the last Budget, but emphasised the onerous cumulative tax and cost burden which faces the industry, and he encourages the government to shift current spend into here-and-now capital projects particul
July 11, 2012 Read time: 5 mins

In an open letter, the UK 2897 Mineral Products Association’s chief executive Nigel Jackson has responded to the speech by the UK Chancellor, George Osborne at the Mansion House Dinner in London in which the Chancellor highlighted measures taken to boost business in the UK.

Jackson welcomed recent measures taken in the last Budget, but emphasised the onerous cumulative tax and cost burden which faces the industry, and he encourages the government to shift current spend into here-and-now capital projects particularly in construction, energy, water and transport infrastructure.

MPA welcomes the freeze on the indexation of the Aggregates Levy until April 2013, which was announced in the last Budget (notwithstanding the association’s continuing opposition to the tax); the increase in the rebate on part of the Climate Change Levy, and the reduction in Corporation Tax overall.

However, Nigel Jackson pointed out: “Whilst appreciating the problems created by the lingering instability of the Eurozone, the UK still has freedom to act in those areas of budgetary management under its control. Welcome as the measures above are, they need to go further. The UK economy is still dogged by too many taxes, indeed too many complex taxes and other measures which give rise to additional costs to business and which simply weaken the commitment to invest in this country.”

For example, many MPA members are subjected to a plethora of environmental, carbon and energy measures including:

•     Aggregates levy
•     Landfill tax
•     Climate Change Levy
•     EUETS (European Union Emissions Trading System)
•     Carbon Reduction Commitment (CRC)
•     Indirect Renewables Obligation costs

MPA says that added to this are the potential impacts of the carbon price floor, uncertainty with regard to any relief that may emerge from the package of compensation arising for Energy Intensive Industries (EIIs), electricity market reform and the increasing cost of implementing regulations emerging from Europe.

Nigel Jackson said: “It is no wonder that indigenous businesses are taking a prudent view on investment and larger international companies question their continuing presence in the UK. We support the CBI’s [4356 Confederation of British Industry] call for a review of all Green Taxes, which we believe will simplify the regulatory burden and aid UK industry’s competitiveness.”

MPA states that too much of what is “in play” politically, and from the media, fails to convey the “hard and gritty” day-to-day realities of running businesses, whether local or global, SME or major.

As a result, the association is in the process of preparing an evidence-based submission for the UK Treasury which will tabulate the cumulative burden of such measures across the industry’s sectors and within MPA members’ businesses. This will be a ‘whole business’ approach, ranging from employment and labour costs, to ‘licence to operate’, production and transport.

In addition, the NPPF (National Planning Policy Framework), which MPA welcomes, now has to prove it can help to deliver sustainable development quickly. The cumulative housing “underbuild”’ in the UK is now chronic and shows little sign of achieving anything like the capacity required prior to the next election, says MPA, claiming that projects that could contribute to growth are mired in political and environmental wrangling, for example the 3rd runway at Heathrow Airport; the River Severn Barrage; repair of the UK road network now estimated as a cumulative liability of £9 billion (€11.4  billion), and the need to kick-start replacement of nuclear capacity and other key energy supplies such as clean coal, shale gas and wind.

The MPA says that while it may be politically enjoyable to promote HS2 (high-speed railway) and additional runway capacity somewhere in the south-east (for example Boris island in the River Thames estuary named after London Mayor Boris Johnson), MPA believes that, in reality, these are currently long term, unfunded aspirations and cannot “make a real difference”’ to growth for 5-10 years at best. However significant and worthy these projects may be, they are distractions from the real here-and-now projects listed above and many other smaller infrastructure schemes which could be progressed quickly.

MPA supports the government’s aims to reduce the deficit and believes that, where possible, money saved on the current account should be re-invested in infrastructure and capital projects, particularly construction.  It is estimated that every pound invested will generate nearly £3 (approximately €3.8) in the economy as a whole.

MPA says that the private sector must play its part too. To do that, it needs to see a sufficiently certain operating environment to justify taking the risks to invest its hard earned cash. After five years of austerity where it, too, has less cash, has cut its people and its costs and has moved its operating model to reflect current demand, which remains 30% lower than in 2007 in our sector, it needs encouragement and incentives and less and lower taxes and regulatory costs, not more.

MPA wants to help government find solutions to these critical issues.

Nigel Jackson explained: “Delivering sound energy, transport and water infrastructure and better housing is a vital investment for the UK and, as the supplier of the largest material flow in the economy, and the largest supplier to the construction industry, these are issues on which we think we are particularly well placed to advise.”

The mineral products industry supplies 250 million tonnes of materials per year: 1 million tonnes per working day.

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