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-   -   Small businesses must read the small print (http://www.democracyforum.co.uk/ukip-general-issues/31989-small-businesses-must-read-small-print.html)

John Page 22-08-2006 10:34 PM

Small businesses must read the small print
 
Quote:

Small businesses must read the small print

22-08-2006

http://www.ukip.org/ukip_news/gen12.php?t=1&id=2463

"Any commitment to helping the small business sector is a good thing", said Godfrey Bloom MEP today (22.8.06), "but the suggestions being made by the Tories are meaningless unless they tackle the greatest threat to competitiveness, that is the huge raft of regulation that comes from Brussels. The Tories' ideas are re-releases, copies or meaningless," said Bloom, who runs his own tax advisory business.

The Conservative proposals include a call for National Insurance and Income Tax to be merged; something that the UK Independence Party has been demanding. Currently the system penalises small businesses and the British Chamber of Commerce recently estimated that payroll costs to SME's are 57 times greater than for larger companies.

"NI is burdensome because it uses a different base to income tax: Income tax is paid on all income over the year, NI is paid on each job and for each pay period. The former uses a single table and common Tax Code, but NI uses a complicated array of at least nine tables", he said.

"We call for every new regulation that affects business, either in Brussels or the gold-plating efforts of Whitehall, to have a Regulatory Impact Assessment instituted and written by the industries affected themselves". He continued: "we would like to see a “one-in-one-out” policy; every regulation subject to an independent RIA. Before new regulations can be enacted, regulations of the same cost must be repealed. This will cap the total regulatory burden on business and make the costs of regulation more transparent. Of course the smallest firms should be exempted from most regulation".

"When it comes to involving employers in education, well the Tories seem to have lifted this straight from our education policy, so we are naturally delighted that they are seeing sense".

Notes:

http://www.fsb.org.uk/data/default.asp?id=64&loc=policy
There are 4.3m small businesses in the UK, employing 12m people [58% of the private sector workforce]. Small firms are responsible for 64% of commercial innovations and 95% employ less than 5 people.
http://www.civitas.org.uk/press/prcs41.php
http://www.chamberonline.co.uk/polic...taxhorizon.pdf
Between 1997-04 the UK fell from 4th to 11th place in the World Economic Forum competitiveness league; from 13th to 30th on regulation; and from 11th to 26th on bureaucracy. The CBI has estimated that around a quarter of regulations and half the regulatory cost is EU related; A recent DTI survey suggested that cutting the burden of employment red tape could create 200,000 small-business jobs

BASILDON BOY 23-08-2006 06:13 PM

...except involving employers in Education was a tory General Election policy - rather than the tories nick our education policy - we appear to have nicked this from the tories!!!

eublues 23-08-2006 07:12 PM

Can see why education has got into the issue that Bloom is on about.

Actually, since the issue has been raised, there is too much "involvement" of "employers" in education already.

How about parents and teachers deciding what education priorities should be? (Talking to other groups, but that's as far as it should go.)


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