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Plaid Cymru pledges to cut taxes to support small businesses if in power

22 Mar 2025 4 minute read
Plaid Cymru MS Luke Fletcher.

Plaid Cymru economy spokesperson Luke Fletcher will announce plans to cut taxes for small, independent Welsh businesses at the party’s Spring Conference in Llandudno.

In a speech on Saturday, (22 March) Mr Fletcher, Plaid’s economy spokesman  is expected to highlight the struggles that independent businesses face in Wales, saying that there are “countless examples the length and breadth of Wales where the full potential of our domestic businesses is going unfulfilled”, with “too many independent shops, pubs, cafés and restaurants having to close” which has led to the decline of town centres.

He will also say that Wales needs to change how it taxes our town centre businesses to realise the potential of town centres and independent businesses and will outline plans to use the business rate multiplier to “reduce rates for independent businesses in retail or hospitality”.

Empty buildings

In his speech, Mr Fletcher MS will say: “Our high streets provide a lens on the challenges facing Welsh businesses – challenges that Labour in Wales has failed to address or made actively worse over a quarter of a century in power.

“It’s a story we’re all too familiar with, isn’t it? On high streets across Wales there are empty buildings and shuttered shop fronts where thriving local businesses should be. Pubs, cafés and restaurants, all struggling with a cost-of-doing business crisis – a crisis made worse by sky-high taxes on businesses and Labour’s scrapping of business rates relief.

“An independent store owner on the high street in Aberystwyth pays nearly ten times more than a major chain on the town’s outskirts, and significantly more than would an equivalent business in England. In Bridgend, a locally owned and managed coffee shop and bakery pays the same level of non-domestic rates as its multinational competitors. Instead of being able to grow and develop as a business, investing locally in the supply chain, training and jobs, it is a business simply looking to survive.

“There are countless examples the length and breadth of Wales of businesses’ full potential going unfulfilled – too many of what should be successful businesses going to the wall. And the result? Town centres in decline, instead of on the up.

“I am proud that more and more businesses are looking to Plaid Cymru for the solution. And I am even more proud that we are able to offer one.

“If we want our town centres to thrive, then we need to change how we tax the businesses on our high streets, to better support the kinds of successful Welsh-owned shops, cafés, bars and restaurants we all go to our town centres for.

“There’s a solution that is well within our grasp.

“Through varying the multiplier, we have the power to reduce rates for independent businesses in retail, leisure and hospitality. It really is that simple. And by looking at how we charge rates so that those who can afford to pay contribute more, it would also be cost-neutral.

Economic plan

Mr Fletcher will also announce the launch in the coming weeks of a new economic plan.

He described ‘Making Wales Work: Plaid Cymru’s new economic plan’ as a a new and ambitious vision for the Welsh economy.

He added: “That vision and that ambition extends from our seabed to our high streets, and covers everywhere in between.

“Our plan will see capital built, retained and recycling in our communities, instead of it leaking – and in some cases flooding – out of Wales. It will grow and sustain Welsh-owned businesses, delivering good jobs, reviving our town centres, and boosting living standards.

“I am clearer now than ever that Wales needs a Government with real vision and with fire in its belly.

“Wales needs a Plaid Cymru Government – and next year we will have an historic opportunity to deliver one.”


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Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
3 days ago

Go for it Plaid, support our rural retail trade, the empty shops should be seen as the foundation on which to build…

Bring the excitement of the ‘non-chain’ retail imagination into our towns.

At the seaside, shops come and go with the regularity of the tides, they need to be more limpet like…help them…

The market towns on the last bridges like Mach and Dol are a treasure and should be nurtured and burnished to attract both local and holiday shopper…

Think Local Plaid…

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
3 days ago
Reply to  Mab Meirion

This could prove to be a real vote winner, our shop-keepers are an increasingly international brigade…

This is a strength that Plaid must embrace and enjoy the good will resulting as it extends into our communities…

Be a broad re-purposed chapel…

One thing the Romans did is they left a lot of retail and creative space for local traders…

Bilbo
Bilbo
3 days ago

Perhaps this can completely replace small business rates relief so all those that can pay do.

John
John
3 days ago

It’s worth remembering small businesses already get relief. I suppose he is referring to making this relief more generous, and increasing the non domestic rates (i.e. Business tax).
My impression is businesses in town centres are struggling more as a result of electricity rises and stagnating incomes, but this is one of the few levers at senedd disposal.
As an aside, one of the big winners would be holiday homes that are council tax exempt as they meet the 180 day threshold. So this might be a policy that is beneficial to some senior politicians!

Last edited 3 days ago by John
hdavies15
hdavies15
2 days ago

Nice idea except it omits to mention who makes up the deficit. In our Welsh context it’s hardly worth going for “tax the rich” because relatively few of them inhabit the Welsh counties.

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