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BOOZER'S BUSINESS RATES BLOW

The oldest pub in England faces paying £22,000 a year EXTRA in business rates

Ye Olde Trip to Jerusalem in Nottingham, which has been in existence since 1189AD, is to be hammered by a 65% rate hike

THE oldest pub in England is to be hammered by a 65% rate rise as ministers consider an ‘action plan’ to soften the blow on small businesses.

Ye Olde Trip to Jerusalem in Nottingham which has been in existence since 1189AD faces an annual hike of more than £22,000 a year under the new plans.

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Ye Olde Trip to Jerusalem in Nottingham, which has been in existence since 1189AD

The watering hole  - a favoured stop for crusading knights en route to the Holy Land - sits at the foot of Nottingham Castle and is promoted as “the oldest inn in England”.

Pub owner Greene King has already written to Chancellor Philip Hammond along with the bosses of pub and restaurant chains to plead that their pubs face being wiped off Britain’s high streets.

Pub chiefs have told Mr Hammond the industry was “not prepared” for the “significant rises”.

They said: “Margins in our sector are already under intense pressure.

“We have already seen evidence of outlets closing as a result of the planned increase.”

Ye Olde Trip's owner Greene King has already written to Chancellor Philip Hammond to plead that their pubs face being wiped off Britain’s high streetsCredit: Getty Images
Pub chiefs have told the Chancellor the industry was 'not prepared' for the 'significant rises'Credit: Getty Images

The Federation of Small Businesses said it was unfair for businesses to be taxed on an “arbitrary property valuation” and not on the money they make.

Spokesman Alan Soady said: “Pubs can be among the losers in this broken business rates system, because their location is often in higher-value premises such as on high streets.

“If the result is that some traditional local pubs are left unable to afford as many staff, it is clearly not going to help the pub, its customers or the local economy.”

Lib Dem leader Tim Farron added: “The local boozer is facing a rates hike while Amazon faces a cut.

“This shows how out of touch ministers are.

“The local pub is at the heart of communities and the government seem committed to heap more costs and more overheads on them.

“These rates hikes should be the death nail for pubs up and country.”

Lib Dem leader Tim Farron added: 'The local boozer is facing a rates hike while Amazon faces a cut. This shows how out of touch ministers are.'Credit: Getty Images

It comes as the Chancellor considers an intervention to ease the “cliff edge” rates hikes for some businesses who face extinction with rises up to a staggering 300 per cent.

Supermarket chiefs branded the business rates system as “archaic” and demanded “a level playing field” for all businesses.

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