Wednesday 15 February 2012

Flying a kite?

From Politics Home we are advised of the following press release:
"15 February 2012

With just five weeks to go until Budget Day, Simon Buck, Chief Executive of the British Air Transport Association, said:
"The Government is investing more than £120 million over the next four years to encourage millions more overseas tourists to visit Britain. This is an ambitious but important objective and vital for UK tourism and jobs, given, for example, that France attracts six times as many Chinese tourists compared to the UK.
Due to our geography, most foreign tourists visit the UK by air. But the UK has the highest taxes on flying in the world and George Osborne is planning on further increasing this tax by 8% from 1st April - over twice the rate of inflation.
This will mean UK taxes on flying will be almost ten times as high as the European average. However, several European countries such as Ireland and the Netherlands have drastically reduced or scrapped their taxes on flying because of the damage they do to their tourist industry.
With just five weeks to go before the Budget, the Chancellor needs to ditch the increases he has planned and announce a phase out of the tax if the Government is serious about boosting UK tourism.

With just five weeks to go until Budget Day, Simon Buck, Chief Executive of the British Air Transport Association, said:
"The Government is investing more than £120 million over the next four years to encourage millions more overseas tourists to visit Britain. This is an ambitious but important objective and vital for UK tourism and jobs, given, for example, that France attracts six times as many Chinese tourists compared to the UK.
Due to our geography, most foreign tourists visit the UK by air. But the UK has the highest taxes on flying in the world and George Osborne is planning on further increasing this tax by 8% from 1st April - over twice the rate of inflation.
This will mean UK taxes on flying will be almost ten times as high as the European average. However, several European countries such as Ireland and the Netherlands have drastically reduced or scrapped their taxes on flying because of the damage they do to their tourist industry.
With just five weeks to go before the Budget, the Chancellor needs to ditch the increases he has planned and announce a phase out of the tax if the Government is serious about boosting UK tourism."
With 'transport', in all its forms, being a competence of the EU it matters not what national "toy governments" do as their decisions can always be overridden by Brussels - and in any event if the "toy governments" of member states have any sense they will 'clear' their intended policies beforehand with their masters.


One would think that the Chief Executive of the British Air Transport Association would be aware of the legal 'technicalities' involved within his field of business, or perhaps the current holder of that post is living up to his surname; and practising the art of passing the decision-making process - after which he appears to be so aptly named.


Consequently one has to ask whether this press release is no more than a public PR exercise- one designed to let the government of the day 'off the hook' - from under which they can wriggle at a later date......


Just asking....................

5 comments:

livescore said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Antisthenes said...

It is all about competitiveness a word that does not appear part of the lexicon of a politician or a technocrat. The road to economic Armageddon is going to be paved with self defeating policies.

Anonymous said...

I appreciate that the EU does interfere in everything, but you would imagine that reducing our tax to the EU average would in fact be logical and within the regulations. Unless of course that's where he's getting the £120 million to "INVEST" in the first place.

TomTom said...

that France attracts six times as many Chinese tourists compared to the UK.

France has the highest number os tourists on the planet......

More importantly, if we have an EU Single Market why is it made prohibitively expensive for anyone to BUILD A BUSINESS within the EU by having such expensive flights ?

WitteringsfromWitney said...

@Livescore why dont you p/off with your spam? Please?

A: You may well have hit the proverbial nail on the head!

Anon: We are talking 'crats here.....

TT: Fair point......