Generated in media coverage for Christmas campaigns on Oxford Street and Bond Street, reinforcing the West End’s status as the ultimate festive destination.
Our people are committed to shaping the future of this iconic district, ensuring it remains a vibrant, inclusive, and world-leading destination for all who visit, work, and live here.
District annual turnover has grown from £3.9bn post-Covid to £9.3bn in 2024, thanks to targeted support and coordinated recovery efforts.
In today’s Spring Budget there was little announced that will have a direct impact on West End businesses.Of course, falling inflation, predicted economic growth and falling government borrowing are all to be welcomed. Measures that increase the employment pool are also positive for our district and the wider country, but these measures will be phased in over time while the need to fill vacancies is the top priority.However, the growth measures announced today are aimed mainly at high tech businesses, new start-ups and businesses outside London. There was no mention of the growth measures that will encourage spending by international visitors, particularly reinstating tax-free shopping and extending Sunday trading hours in London’s International Centres.With calls for these reforms growing, New West End Company will continue to tirelessly campaign in order to restore our international competitiveness.Please click the links below to read:
Commenting on the Spring Statement, Dee Corsi, Chief Executive of New West End Company, commented:
“The Chancellor has missed an opportunity to look again at Sunday trading hours and help address some of the damage done by his introduction of VAT on spending by international visitors. The recovery of the West End has been remarkable but continues to lag other global shopping destinations with less restrictive trading hours such as Dubai, New York, Milan, and even Paris where they have liberalised trading hours in certain tourist hotspots. The West End is 65% busier on Sundays in terms of footfall, as well as spend per trading hour, so extending shopping hours would be a practical and cost-free way of generating an additional third of a billion of net additional sales that the UK currently misses out on.”
The Budget was billed as a Growth Budget, focusing on delivering four elements of The Chancellor’s Growth Plan: Enterprise, Employment, Education and Everywhere. Please find more details on the three elements of Enterprise, Employment and Everywhere below.
The Chancellor also suggested that the Government intends to withdraw all remaining central support from Local Enterprise Partnerships from April 2024, with the responsibility for delivery passing to local government. The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities and the Department for Business and Trade will consult on this decision.
If you would like further information, please contact our Head of Advocacy, Paul Barnes, here.