By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions.
Accept
routeonerouteonerouteone
  • News
    • Show all
    • Awards & Events
    • Deliveries
    • Environment
    • Exhibitor News
    • Euro Bus Expo 2024
    • Features
    • Legal
    • Minibus and minicoach
    • Operators
    • Opinion
    • People
    • Suppliers
    • Vehicles
  • Vehicles
    • Find a Vehicle
    • ZEV Comparison Tool
    • Sell a Vehicle
    • Vehicle Seller Dashboard
  • Insights
  • Careers
  • Events
    • British Tourism & Travel Show
    • Euro Bus Expo
    • Innovation Challenge
    • Livery Competition
    • routeone Awards
  • Advertise
  • Contact
    • Share your news
    • Subscribe
    • Update Subscription Details
  • Latest Issue
  • SIGN UP
Search
© 2024 routeone News. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Budget will hit coach and bus operators hard, says CPT CEO
Share
Font ResizerAa
routeonerouteone
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • News
    • Show all
    • Awards & Events
    • Deliveries
    • Environment
    • Exhibitor News
    • Euro Bus Expo 2024
    • Features
    • Legal
    • Minibus and minicoach
    • Operators
    • Opinion
    • People
    • Suppliers
    • Vehicles
  • Vehicles
    • Find a Vehicle
    • ZEV Comparison Tool
    • Sell a Vehicle
    • Vehicle Seller Dashboard
  • Insights
  • Careers
  • Events
    • British Tourism & Travel Show
    • Euro Bus Expo
    • Innovation Challenge
    • Livery Competition
    • routeone Awards
  • Advertise
  • Contact
    • Share your news
    • Subscribe
    • Update Subscription Details
  • Latest Issue
  • SIGN UP
Follow US
© 2024 routeone News | Powered by Diversified Business Communications UK Ltd
- Advertisement -
-
routeone > Opinion > Budget will hit coach and bus operators hard, says CPT CEO
Opinion

Budget will hit coach and bus operators hard, says CPT CEO

Graham Vidler
Graham Vidler
Published: December 16, 2024
Share
rachel reeves budget
Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ NI changes could cost a typical operator around £800 per employee
SHARE

Changes concerning employer National Insurance contributions run counter to the government’s aim to reform bus services, says Confederation of Passenger Transport CEO Graham Vidler

At its heart, the coach and bus industry is a people business. Every service we operate requires drivers and engineers, not to mention sales teams, cleaners and managers. Our members provide skilled jobs in every town and city in Britain.

Bus companies employ 105,000 people, while 54,000 people work in the coach sector. So our industry will feel the pain directly from a rise in employers’ National Insurance contributions announced by the Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, in her first Budget.

The NI increase is from 13.8% to 15% and it will be levied on all salaries above £5,000, instead of the previous threshold of £9,100 – a change that Ms Reeves admitted would be “difficult” for businesses.

Our members have been swift to point out the impact — with some rethinking plans for investment, expansion, recruitment and new services – Graham Vidler

For a driver earning £30,000, the additional cost on an employer’s payroll bill will be £800 — far from pocket change. In fact, it’s a sum that accumulates so quickly that it’s disconcerting that this has been imposed by a government that insists it is dedicated to a “bus revolution”.

Westminster works in peculiar ways. But it was a particular puzzler for the government to fanfare a £1 billion package to boost bus services in October, including a year’s extension of the bus fare cap in England, followed in just 48 hours by such a big NI rise.

Our members have been swift to point out the impact — with some rethinking plans for investment, expansion, recruitment and new services. It is particularly challenging to absorb a sudden increase in payroll costs given the ongoing driver shortage across the sector, which has contributed to steep wage inflation.

The Budget contained a second unwelcome surprise for hundreds of coach businesses, which are suddenly to be subject to inheritance tax. Around eight out of ten small and medium-sized coach operators are family-held — and they will be captured by a change in the rules intended largely to hit large landowners.

These are costly frustrations for entrepreneurs across our industry. It would be churlish, though, to ignore broader positive signals about the place that buses hold in our society.

The government is putting an end to the system of local authorities competing against each other for bus funding, instead declaring that it will be allocated nationwide.

And a sensible plan has been put in place to continue the £2 national fare cap at a higher level for a year, rather than allowing an overnight “cliff edge”.

Certain mantras can be troubling — such as the insistence that franchising solves everything. But there is a sense that politicians acknowledge the importance of Britain’s most popular form of public transport.

We do, though, need to hammer home the point that a rise in employment costs must be borne somewhere — and that the impact will ultimately be felt by the 10 million people who travel by bus every day.

TAGGED:opinionTrade Talk
Share This Article
Facebook LinkedIn Threads Email Copy Link
Previous Article Good repute a must for professional competence: Upper Tribunal
Next Article coach driver DCPC Coach and bus legal Q&A: Employment rights and DCPC changes
- Advertisement -

Latest News

CPT throws celebration for Edwards Coaches centenary
News
Kinchbus orders Yutong E9L and E12 battery electric buses
Kinchbus orders 21 Yutong E9L and E12 battery-electrics
News
Optare Solos for Shuttle Buses of Kilwinning
Shuttle Buses four Optare Solos among last of the type to be built
Deliveries
Passennger Lift Solutions Lifts in the wild competition
Passenger Lift Solutions launches photo competition
Accessible Transport
- Advertisement -
-

routeone magazine is the indispensable resource for professional UK coach, bus and minibus operators. The home of vehicle sales and the latest bus and coach job vacancies, routeone connects professional PCV operators with complete and unrivalled news coverage.

  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • GDPR Policy
  • Sustainability
  • Advertise
  • Latest Issue
  • Share Your News
routeonerouteone
Follow US
© 2024 routeone News | Powered by Diversified Business Communications UK Ltd