Labour’s planned reforms to employment rights pose a “highly damaging” threat to business investment and recruitment, according to Rupert Soames, president of the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) and chairman of medical technology firm Smith & Nephew.
His comments follow government amendments to the Employment Rights Bill this week, which include boosting statutory sick pay and extending zero-hours contract measures to agency workers.
Ministers argue the legislation will drive productivity and economic growth, and it has received backing from some prominent leaders, including the bosses of Centrica and Richer Sounds. However, the CBI – one of Britain’s largest business lobby groups – and others such as the British Chambers of Commerce, British Retail Consortium, UKHospitality and the Institute of Directors have voiced serious reservations.
Soames says the new rules will cost companies an extra £5 billion, encouraging them to scale back on both hiring and capital investment. He also points to existing burdens on employers, including rises in National Insurance and the National Living Wage, as well as higher business rates and steeper taxes on intergenerational transfers of business assets, which cumulatively undermine growth.
While acknowledging a minority of bad employers in the marketplace, Soames argues that penalising “the 99 per cent” to catch the few is counterproductive. He highlights “fire and rehire” as a practice used by fewer than 1 per cent of companies, yet the government plans measures that would add “vast additional complexity” for all.
Support authors and subscribe to content
This is premium stuff. Subscribe to read the entire article.