HL Deb 19 July 1990 vol 521 c1106WA
Lord Colnbrook

asked Her Majesty's Government:

What is the average change and the aggregate change in rate bills for small shops in 1990–91 compared with 1989–90.

The Parliamentary UnderSecretary of State, Department of the Environment (Lord Hesketh)

While there is considerable variation in the charges for individual shops, the average rate bill for small shops in England has fallen as a result of the introduction of the uniform business rate and of the nondomestic revaluation. Including the effect of the transitional arrangements, there has been a 2 per cent. reduction in real terms compared with 1989–90. The aggregate rate bill of such shops has fallen by £10 million in real terms. This is partly because the uniform business rate has kept the total increase in business rates well below the increase in local authority spending this year. For this purpose small shops are those with rateable values of £500 or more and less than £15,000 in London and £10,000 elsewhere—the definition used in the business rate transitional arrangements.