Politics

Macron mocks Sunak as Brexit Britain bins tourist tax relief

Emmanuel Macron appeared to mock Brexit Britain’s plans for global superiority after he extended France’s tax-free tourist shopping in the same week Rishi Sunak moved to end it.

Bosses from some of the world’s leading high street brands have hit out at the Chancellor for ending the scheme warning it will cost 40,000 British jobs and £1 billion of investment.

Many had hoped that the perk, which allows non-EU tourists to make big savings on their shopping in London and elsewhere in Britain, would be extended to visitors from Europe once Brexit is fully implemented.

Instead the Treasury scrapped it, claiming that it was “a costly relief” that mainly benefited London.

Writing in the Evening Standard, business editor Jim Armitage said Rishi’s sums “just do not add up”, adding:

“Since the referendum, Brexiteers have promised that leaving Europe would enable Britain to become a super-competitive global power.

“Unshackled from the rules and regulations of EU trade, we would be able to unleash our potential to win new customers from around the world, far beyond the borders of Europe.

“Yet the Chancellor, a long-standing eurosceptic, is nodding through massive changes in VAT rules that will make Britain far more expensive for the high-spending tourists on whom hundreds of thousands of British jobs rely.”

A further kick in the teeth is that France is already taking advantage of the move.

Within days President Macron had slashed the value of goods on which VAT can be reclaimed from 175 euros to 150 euros, and Ireland is planning something similar too.

So much for a global Britain.

Related: Chances of a Brexit breakthrough “receding” with just days left

Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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