PRIVACY
Opinion

Budget 2021: Rishi Sunak's statement 'most important' day in history of hospitality sector

Alex Reilley is co-founder and chairman of Loungers PLC, a listed bar-café business with 170 venues located across the UK

Loungers' co-founder and chair Alex Reilley(Image: Loungers)

The Budget is arguably the most important day in the history of the hospitality sector.

What Chancellor Rishi Sunak announces when he stands at the dispatch box on March 3 could either give some desperately-needed hope to our battered sector or it could crush thousands of hospitality businesses in a single, devastating blow.

What the Chancellor says, and does, will demonstrate the importance the Government places on the survival of a large proportion of the sector - and whether the loss of thousands of hospitality businesses and hundreds of thousands more jobs will just go down as regrettable collateral damage.

We will learn whether this Government truly understands the invaluable role our sector – pubs, bars, cafes, restaurants and hotels – plays in everyday life. We will also learn whether the enormous contribution hospitality makes, both economically and in terms of employment, is recognised, and most significantly, respected by the chancellor.

'The industry needs more than warm words'

This industry, which is a massive employer of young people and in normal times an absolute economic powerhouse producing millions in taxes to fund public services, needs more than warm, sympathetic words. We are not looking for an extension of existing support measures.

We need meaningful measures that ensure hospitality businesses can genuinely survive until they are permitted to reopen - and have a future.

The furlough scheme has been amazing for our employees but the need for businesses to support the scheme when most have no revenue makes it feel far from supportive for the employers.

It’s helped businesses hold onto their teams, and we have a workforce that can be reactivated, but given the cost of employers’ NI and pension contributions we have had to bear since November, I wonder how many businesses would have been forced into the heart-breaking decision to lay off staff in order to preserve cash had they known they wouldn’t be able to reopen until May 17.