SIBA expresses concerns at SBR technical consultation

SIBA has expressed its concerns at a number of areas evident in the Treasury’s technical consultation on the future of Small Breweries’ Relief.

The sprawling consultation can be found here.

SIBA outlines that three key areas of concern remain. These being:

  1. Treasury admit that there are significant issues in how production cost data was gathered. We have concerns about the validity of other evidence submitted to Treasury leading to the policy conclusions.
  2. ​Initial review suggests that around 150 brewers​ producing between 2,100hl and 5,000hl still stand to pay more in duty when reforms are introduced.
  3. That the mechanism used to calculate a cash basis of relief (rather than a percentage) still has the potential to, over time, erode the benefit of the relief, making brewers less competitive.

The association added: “SIBA will publish a fuller analysis and our views on the questions it asks in due course following discussions with our Board and with the industry.

“SIBA will continue to engage closely and positively with Treasury. We encourage all independent brewers to read the consultation with care, engage with us as your trade association and submit your views to your MP and Treasury directly. If you have questions, please ask us.

“The consultation is of course published at a time where every pub in the country is closed ​with small brewers losing 80% of their sales and who face having to pour away more unsaleable beer at their own expense. 

“Small brewers have not received the same level of financial support from Government ​as othe​r hospitality ​businesses.

“These ​proposed changes come despite the support of over 100 MPs who have written to the Chancellor demanding a rethink, and a recent debate in Parliament where cross party MPs showed their support for small breweries.

“The Treasury’s own figures show that 73% of small brewers are content with SBR and 72% do not believe that those over 2,500hl should receive less relief. ”

Three key areas of concern remain: 

ARTICLES
PODCASTS