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Budget is the worst blow to whisky for 33 years, claims SNP



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Published Date:
14 March 2008
ALISTAIR Darling was last night accused of slapping the biggest tax on whisky in a generation after he defended the rise as helping to fight poverty.
The SNP published figures showing that the extra 59p on a bottle was the largest since 1975, accusing the Chancellor of abandoning moves to equalise duty on spirits, wine and beer.

Angus Robertson, the SNP's Westminster group leader, whose Moray
constituency contains more than half the country's malt distilleries, said the 6 per cent hike – which will be followed by four more years of increases of 2 per cent above inflation – was hugely damaging.

He said: "Alistair Darling has undone any benefit the whisky industry had from the previous duty freeze, and this is a bitter blow for an industry on which so many jobs and rural communities are dependent."

But Mr Darling said the industry had enjoyed a decade of duty freezes and the move would have no effect on foreign trade.

The Treasury's own figures showed the duty per litre of pure alcohol has increased by £1.79 to £21.35, higher than the increases of £1.58 in 1991 and £1.61 in 1992. Mr Darling said: "Increasing the duty on all alcohol has allowed me to increase the money going to families with children, increase child benefit and help families with lower incomes.

"What is also important to Scotland is making sure we get children out of poverty and help elderly people, as well as looking at a wider range of measures – stability in the economy, keeping interest rates down, which keeps mortgage rates down – all of these things are crucially important to Scotland."

The row came as yesterday's Commons debate on the Budget ended 40 minutes early when there were no MPs left to speak – many prefer to leave London early for their constituencies at the end of the week. However, Holyrood debated the whisky duty rise, with Alex Salmond, the First Minister, warning that the Budget would "damage Scotland's economic interests".

Meanwhile, the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said the Chancellor would have to make an £8 billion cut in spending if Labour's sums were to add up by 2011.

Robert Chote, director of the IFS, said Mr Darling would have to find a further £4 billion in spending cuts in his next review – scheduled for 2009 – on top of £4 billion already pencilled in.

Concerns also grew about the effect of the government's plans to force the UK's 2.6 million incapacity benefit claimants to undergo tests to continue to receive the pay-outs.

Testing will begin in 2010, with people applying for benefits from the autumn being warned they will come under scrutiny.

Danny Alexander, a Lib Dem MP, said: "The government should focus on providing more personalised support for claimants to get them back into long-term work."

'STEALTH TAX' RISE IN NATIONAL INSURANCE

EMPLOYEES earning around £40,000 a year face a shock next month as higher National Insurance payments kick in.

Despite the Chancellor making no mention of the change, an extra £95 a week of income will be paid at the higher 11 per cent tax rate.

This means an extra £543 will disappear on annual salaries for many above-average earners.

The changes are part of the package on personal incomes flagged up by Gordon Brown last year in his final Budget. This included the scrapping of the 10p income tax band and the reduction in the main rate from 22p to 20p.

Mark Pragnell, of the Centre for Economics and Business Research, said the changes were a "stealth tax" that had not been clearly disclosed.

KENNEDY SLATES DARLING'S 'AMAZING DECLINE'

ALISTAIR Darling's reputation has collapsed faster than that of any chancellor of recent times, Charles Kennedy said last night.

The former leader of the Liberal Democrats said Mr Darling's nine months in charge of the Treasury had left his personal standing at "absolutely rock bottom" and was unprecedented in Mr Kennedy's time in parliament.

Speaking on BBC TV's Question Time, Mr Kennedy said: "It's been the most amazing decline of any chancellor I have witnessed there for 25 years."

Mr Darling also came under attack from George Osborne, the Tory shadow chancellor, who said he had been left a "lousy" inheritance by his predecessor, the Prime Minister, Gordon Brown.

Gas-guzzling tax is set to backfire say car dealers

ALASTAIR DALTON
TRANSPORT CORRESPONDENT


ROAD tax hikes to encourage greener motoring will fail to put off buyers of the cars which cause most pollution, luxury model dealers have said.

The apparent backfiring of the Chancellor's attack on gas guzzlers came as analysts predicted that used cars would lose their value quicker.

Alistair Darling has added an extra one-off "showroom tax" from 2010 for new cars producing more than 255g/km of carbon dioxide.

This will double the top rate of vehicle excise duty for the first year of a car's life from £455 to £950. Lower rates of the "showroom tax" – which will cover about a third of new cars – will apply to vehicles producing more than 161g/km of .

But, Pentland LandRover in Edinburgh said last year's top-rate tax disc increase to £300 had not harmed sales.

Gordon Campbell, the sales manager, said: "I don't think it will have a major effect, but it's a contentious issue because other drivers may do three times the mileage in smaller cars."

Kenny Dunn, a Porsche used-car dealer in Edinburgh, said he might benefit from the "showroom tax", but doubted whether it would make buyers of his models, which average £40-50,000, think twice.

EurotaxGlass's, motor industry analysts, said depreciation of three-year-old cars would increase to 8 per cent this year compared to 5 per cent.

Adrian Rushmore, the managing editor, said: "The increased cost of borrowing, stagnant house prices and widespread reports of a UK 'credit squeeze' are all affecting consumers' disposable income and confidence, and these factors will prevail."



The full article contains 1006 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 14 March 2008 12:49 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Whisky , The Budget
 
1

Snuffy Ivy,

Aberdeen 14/03/2008 03:09:51
"Cuts" and "tax increases" equal bad government management and poor fiscal responsibility. Britain is the poor man of the globe due to its outrageous and ridiculous archaic tax system. More for government less for the workers!
2

Very Rev Ian Paisley,

14/03/2008 03:19:23
Take our oil, tax our whisky, give us second rate jobs and kill us young
3

,

14/03/2008 03:57:08
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
4

,

14/03/2008 04:12:19
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
5

Rulesbutnotrulers,

Federation, not separation 14/03/2008 06:40:44
This story is such bull! A 59p increase makes a dram 5p dearer. Even a sober drinker would hardly notice that.

No one has to drink or smoke so only volunteers pay these taxes.

Tax vice reward virtue: cut out income tax!
6

Rulesbutnotrulers,

Federation, not separation 14/03/2008 06:42:43
#6 I wanted to write n eye p rather than dram, above, but the system forbade it!
7

donald,

glasgow 14/03/2008 07:51:48
That explains the urgency in clawing back miniatures from a Glasgow housewife.
8

donald,

glasgow 14/03/2008 07:52:06
That explains the urgency in clawing back miniatures from a Glasgow housewife.
9

Peekay,

14/03/2008 08:05:37
We have had MacAskill banging on for months about the link between cheap drink and alcohol-associated problems. So increasing the price by stopping supermarkets selling cheap booze is considered a good way of tackling the problem, but increasing the price by raising the tax is not? Am I missing something here?
10

Loki, Angel of Death,

Edinburgh 14/03/2008 08:26:06
#10 Last time I looked the anti social element that thrived on cheap alcohol usually purchased Buckfast and tennents lager. I haven't seen many teenage gangs, or groups of socially irresponsible adults, running around with bottles of Talisker or Lagavullin. Get real, this is a tax to hurt Scotland for not voting labour.

I might listen to westminster if they were to ban the sale of Buckfast in Scotland, but that's not very pc is it. Think of all those poor monks that would lose most of their sales, how terrible.

I know, westminster could ban the sale of Buckfast in Scotland and sort out some kind of rescue package for the monks whereby the tax payer funds them to make the wine but pour it down the plughole.

What next Alistair? A tax on breathing scotch mist?

Stay alive people, it's the only way to live!

Loki
11

long live the supermarkets,

Dundee 14/03/2008 09:10:14
How do politicans sleep at night easy when we are paying one thousand pounds for a bed.For the price of a politician's bed you could fit out two whole bedrooms from a shop in the centre of our town.Where do they shop in Harrods.
12

Paddi,

14/03/2008 09:19:11
Not just whisky, National Insurance up by a penny, car tax = 88% of all cars will pay more, personal allownces held back. New Labour are Old Labour = tax and spend. more pain to come folks as brown and darling far cup the economy
13

Alternative (High Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 14/03/2008 10:17:31
Tax, spend.
Tax, spend.
Tax, spend.
Tax, spend.

Typical labour. Why did we vote them into power?

14

HEN BROON 5,

14/03/2008 10:38:27
Have just ordered a 5.2 litre engine for my Range Rover Vogue from RPI. It is a Chevy V8 and will pull 0 > 60 in 7 seconds, and go on to 150 mph. It will also run on LPG. So fuk em.
15

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 14/03/2008 11:22:11
I keep telling you Scots to switch to Irish whiskey and boycott Scotch whisky but nobody listens.

Bushmill's is sweeter, doesn't give you hangovers, and is the oldest distillery in the UK (I think).

Some keep referring me Scotch from Islay and I have tried them but the ones I like are SO expensive that I hide the bottles when certain greedy guests come over because they practically inhale the stuff.
16

Highland Mighty,

14/03/2008 11:27:58
Yawn.

It is 55p not 59p.

It's the first rise in duty in TEN YEARS.

55p on a bottle of whisky is a mere 4% increase in shop-price.

The SNP really are struggling to find reasons to be angry with the rest of the country.
17

ennerdale27,

sale cheshire 14/03/2008 11:42:28
A whole 0.59p!
A betrayal, a gotterdammerung!
What nonesense - the increase is marginal at best and will have no effect on sales.
A £9.00 bottle of Tesco value will now be £9.59 and bottle of Johny Walker Green Label (15yrs old and VERY nice) will now be approx £27.00 intead of about £26.41.
They're really making the pips squeak there aren't they?
18

JayDeeTee,

14/03/2008 11:56:00
Tell me something, did that guy with the funny eyebrows put up taxes on whisky only, or did he raise taxes on other spirits such as Gin and Vodka etc? Surely it was not just whisky??
19

David Harrington,

Edinburgh 14/03/2008 12:39:19
This is a storm in a tea cup - the duty has not gone up for 10 years
20

ptdoug,

14/03/2008 13:49:54
I propose a tax on unnaturally dark eye-brows.
21

Itchy,

14/03/2008 15:53:59
"Get real, this is a tax to hurt Scotland for not voting labour. "

Spot on.

By his own figures, he will not raise any money. The man is an idiot.
22

Itchy,

Lochgelly 14/03/2008 15:55:38
#6 tax vice, reward virtue?

You fascist.
23

Highland Mighty,

14/03/2008 16:03:25
22. Yep, you've caught him out.

He raised tax on ALL spirits throught the ENTIRE UK purely to spite Scotland.

Idiot.
24

Highland Mighty,

14/03/2008 16:09:50
2. "Britain is the poor man of the globe due to its outrageous and ridiculous archaic tax system."

2nd highest GDP per Capita in the G7 - We were 7th in the 90s.
Strongest economy in Europe - We were the 'sick man of Europe' in the 70s and 80s.
$1Trillion invested by multinationals in the UK last year.
Lowest government debt of all major economies.
etc.etc.

You were saying?
25

Richardinho,

14/03/2008 17:52:27
Unlike beer and tobacco, Whisky is not a 'necessary' good that people will pay for no matter the price. It is in a deeply competitive market and this will hit it hard.
26

Itchy,

14/03/2008 18:11:14
#24 Where else in the UK is a huge producer of spirits?

Imbecile.

Of course it was going to hit Scotland.

27

Highland Mighty,

14/03/2008 22:52:19
27. Independence would almost certainly mean the closure of the UK-dependent Clyde shipyards with the loss of 40,000-60,000 jobs.

This duty will have a negligable effect on Whisky production being a mere 4% rise in prices and that's after a ten-year freeze.

But where's the uproar about the SNP's primary policy threatening the shipbuilding industry?
28

connaughtboy,

stonehaven 14/03/2008 23:57:21
#17 HM you obviously cant count. And you are a prize ar se

 

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