FSB calls for Peers to save small retailers

The Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) today called on Peers to support the Retail Development Bill, which will receive its second reading in the House of Lords tomorrow (22 February).

Following the failure by the Competition Commission last week to ensure fair competition in the grocery sector, the Bill calls for measures to create a level playing field for small shops and supermarkets:

– A business rates review based on annual turnover and floor space

– The introduction of retail development plans that put the interests of local communities first

– The creation of an independent Office of Retail Planning

The Bill, sponsored by Lord Cotter, is the latest attempt to save small shops and enable local communities to have a voice and influence where new supermarkets are planned. The Bill promotes the right to choice, diversity and convenience.

The UK is losing 2000 small shops each year and is rapidly approaching a tipping point after which there will be too few local retailers to make the wholesale market viable.

Clive Davenport, FSB Trade & Industry Chairman, said:

“The Retail Development Bill offers a lifeline to many local communities that rapidly losing their local shops and services. The future of 50,000 small shops hangs in the balance, so we call on Peers to support this Bill in the hope that it will gain Government backing.

“We need a review of business rates to ensure that small shops at the heart of the community are not paying over the odds, while out of town supermarkets pay rock bottom rates. We also want an independent Office of Retail Planning to consider the wider impact of retail developments on local economies and communities.

“It is frankly absurd that on the one hand we are told to reduce our carbon footprint, whilst on the other we are haemorrhaging our independent retailers, which are based on our doorsteps and source local produce. The average person now travels 893 miles a year to shop for food. The best solution for our economy and the environment is to ‘Keep Trade Local’.”

Friends of the Earth welcomed the Bill’s emphasis on the need for Government action to protect and promote retail diversity.

Sandra Bell, supermarkets campaigner for Friends of the Earth said:

“The Retail Development Bill does what the Competition Commission has failed to do – it acknowledges the significant contribution that small independent shops bring to local communities and economies. And it supports genuine diversity in retailing where the Competition Commission only aims to give shoppers a choice between the big bland supermarkets”.

ENDS

Notes to Editors:

1. The All-Party Parliamentary Small Shops Group predicts that there will be no independent retailers after 2015, this equates to the loss of 50,000 small shops.

2. Small businesses employ 58% of the private sector workforce, contribute over 50% of UK GDP and make up more than 99% of all UK businesses.

3. The FSB is Britain’s biggest business organisation with over 210,000 members. It exists to protect and promote the interests of the self-employed, and all those who run their own business. More information is available at www.fsb.org.uk.

Contacts:

For interviews with FSB Chief Spokesman Stephen Alambritis or other senior FSB personnel please contact the FSB Press Office.

FSB Press Office

Andrew Cave: 020 7592 8113 / 07917 628991
Simon Briault: 020 7592 8128 / 07917 628998
Belinda Webb: 020 7592 8121 / 07825 125 695

For regional FSB contacts please go to www.fsb.org.uk/regions