In its New Year’s Message, the Northern Ireland Independent Retail Trade Association (NIIRTA) has made Rates Reform its main priority in 2017 and called for a reboot of the Executive’s economic policy.
NIIRTA Chief Executive Glyn Roberts said: “The 12.5% Corporation Tax rate is no silver bullet and without real investment in Skills and Infrastructure its real potential will be lost. In light of Brexit and the rapidly changing world economy we need to see a ‘reboot’ of economic policy in the new Programme for Government toward a stronger focus on Skills, Infrastructure and radical reform of business rates.
“The York Street Interchange is vital for our economy and for the modernisation of the infrastructure of Northern Ireland. Congestion on this bottleneck is fast becoming a major problem for shoppers and freight transport to Belfast and beyond.
“We also need a new belt and braces Entrepreneurship strategy to include the Executive, Invest NI, Councils, Colleges, Banks and private sector all working on an agreed plan. The Department for the Economy could take forward a new Enterprise and Small Business Bill to create the policy framework to create conditions for the next generation of entrepreneurs, particularly new independent retailers.
“The Finance Minister has made excellent progress on bringing forward a new targeted Rates Relief Scheme for independent retail and hospitality sectors and we urge all party support for his plan which is based upon a joint plan submitted by NIIRTA and Hospitality Ulster.
“This plan is not just about rates relief – it is about investing in the future of villages, towns and cities and two vital sectors who contribute so much to tourism, supporting local producers and above all tens of thousands of local jobs.
“On Brexit we need a clear plan to ensure the protection of tariff and barrier-free access to the EU 11million Euro Single Market, with its 500 million consumers and 26 million businesses. A top priority is to ensure that Brexit does not result in the hardening of the border and that no barriers are placed on trade or cross-border workers.
“Northern Ireland needs some degree of special status in its relationship with the EU and we call upon the Executive and NIO to produce a draft model of what that will look like which could form the basis of negotiations.
“2017 must see the publication of a radical pro-business Executive Programme for Government. With a competitive rates policy, modernised infrastructure and investment in skills, there is no reason why Northern Ireland could not be the best place in the UK and Ireland to locate or start a business.”