The amount firms can invest in
plants and machinery from pre-tax profits should be frozen at its current
limit, a major business group has said.
The British Chambers of Commerce
(BCC) has urged the chancellor to make the current £500,000 annual investment
allowance (AIA) for firms permanent.
The allowance is due to fall to
£25,000 at the end of December.
The body argues the move would help
to tackle "unacceptable business investment uncertainty".
"This would help to achieve
better balanced growth and to tackle the unacceptable uncertainty created by
the constant chopping and changing of UK tax structures and incentives",
the BCC said.
The BCC, which represents businesses
that employ more than 5 million people, has also urged the chancellor to widen
the allowance so that it includes improvements to business premises.
'Warning sign'
Business investment fell 1.4% in the
fourth quarter of last year, a decline that the BCC says it expects to
continue.
The body has already more than
halved its 2015 forecast for business investment from 7.5% to 3.5%, which it
says would mark the slowest rate of growth for six years.
BCC director general John Longworth
said its lowered forecast was "a warning sign that more needs to be
done".
"A long-term investment
allowance would give businesses of all sizes much-needed certainty," he
added.
The threshold has been changed
frequently since it was first introduced in April 2008 at £50,000. Two years
later, it was doubled to £100,000 for two years before being reduced to £25,000
and then temporarily increased to £250,000.
In last year's Budget, chancellor
George Osborne said the limit would temporarily be increased from £250,000 to
£500,000 from 1 April this year until 31 December.
The BCC's move follows similar
requests from a host of other business groups.
The manufacturers' association, the
EEF, wants the current £500,000 allowance to be maintained, while the Institute
of Directors has said it should be increased to £1m, and the CBI has said it
should be made permanent at £250,000 from the start of next year.
source: BBC
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