National Insurance Contributions (Secondary Class 1 Contributions) Bill Debate
Full Debate: Read Full DebateBaroness Neville-Rolfe
Main Page: Baroness Neville-Rolfe (Conservative - Life peer)Department Debates - View all Baroness Neville-Rolfe's debates with the HM Treasury
(4 days, 11 hours ago)
Lords ChamberMy Lords, I will also speak to Motions B, C and D. On Motions A, B and C, the other place has disagreed with Amendments 1B, 5B and 8B as they would interfere with public revenue. The other place did not offer any further reason, trusting that this reason is deemed sufficient. On that basis, I hope that noble Lords are content not to insist on Amendments 1B, 5B and 8B.
I turn to Motion D. The other place has disagreed with Amendment 21B for the reason that the Government and the OBR have already outlined the impacts of this policy change. I have no doubt that the amendments tabled at previous stages of the Bill by the noble Baronesses, Lady Neville-Rolfe and Lady Noakes, and the noble Lord, Lord Londesborough, were well intentioned, and I am grateful to them for ensuring that these important matters have been properly addressed during our debates.
More broadly, I assure all noble Lords that giving careful consideration to and properly assessing the impact of the Bill is a priority for this Government. I commit on behalf of the Government to continually monitoring and assessing the impacts and effects of these policies.
Specifically with regard to special educational needs and disability, which has been the subject of several such amendments, the Government recognise the challenges within the SEND system, where outcomes for children and young people are often poor. The Government understand that change is urgently needed and we are committed to delivering long-term, sustainable change.
On the issue of SEN transport, while the Government do not expect the changes to national insurance to have a significant impact on home-to-school travel for children with SEND, I can commit that all these issues will be fully considered as part of the forthcoming spending review. On that basis, I hope that noble Lords will be content not to insist on Amendment 21B. I beg to move.
My Lords, I simply thank the Minister and, again, all who have been involved in the passage of this difficult Bill, especially those who have supported me and my noble friend Lord Altrincham. We have had seven days of debate in the House and nine successful votes, in collaboration with other Benches. That demonstrated the serious concerns about this Bill, right across the House.
There is a strong feeling, echoed externally in our hospices, in hospitality, on the high street and in many other places, that the Bill is not the best way to meet the challenges that the country faces, and that it will endanger the growth we need so badly. However, this is a House of scrutiny, and the other place has taken a different view. As a responsible Opposition, we will not seek to defeat this Bill, no matter how deeply we feel about it. His Majesty’s Government must be able to set their tax policy, and of course we respect that.
I should add that I am grateful to the Minister for his closing words, especially in relation to SEND transport, and for his undertaking to monitor—as I think he said—the impacts and effect of the Bill going forward. We will hold him to that. Moreover, he knows that I and one or two others will continue to encourage the Treasury to learn from all of this and experiment with fuller sectoral assessments in the future.
My Lords, the amendments that underlie Motions A and B that came from the House of Lords were in the name of my colleague and noble friend Lord Scriven. On his behalf, and on behalf of my Benches, we recognise that we have come to end the of the road on this Bill and we will not press for any further amendments.
I will make a couple of comments. I have just come from a fairly extensive meeting with R3, the insolvency and restructuring professionals’ body. Those around the table were telling me of the cascade of small businesses that are already going into voluntary insolvency because of the increasing costs that they face this April. When the Minister says that he will look at evaluating the Bill and its impacts, I hope he will make sure that his view casts across that territory, because it is obviously fundamental to the agenda for growth. Within those discussions, of course, were many private social care providers. A number of the smaller ones—at least three of the practitioners around the table—were dealing with insolvencies triggered over the last few weeks.
From what the Minister said, I hope that he and his Government will recognise that they now need to use other means to step in and shore up the key sectors that are faced with costs they cannot sustain and are therefore closing services which we absolutely need. I hope very much that his commitment to ongoing evaluation will incorporate all of that and be granular—we were hopeful when we heard his words on SEND transport, because that is quite a granular issue—rather than the overarching kind that we have been dealing with in this House.
However, the Minister has always been gracious. I understand that this has been exceedingly difficult and that the Government face very difficult and strenuous times. We recognise that, at this point, we can take this Bill no farther. We thank everyone who has participated, from all Benches, and all the people in our back offices and Whips’ offices who have provided so much support.