Bold Seagull
strong and stable with me, or...
So how much of that £16 billion was capital projects to non-VAT registered people? I'm sorry but blithely chucking that out without substantiating how much of it relates to capital purchases is meaningless. For every £40,000 loft conversion there must be at least 100 repair bills of less than £1000 where a VAT reduction will not make the slightest difference in deciding whether to have the remedial work or not.
I've got no idea how it breaks down, you made a sweeping statement that reducing VAT in the sector will make no difference to the overall figures, I give you that this market is bigger than you think. Now to completely void your argument, and probably contradict my own, the reason the government don't want to reduce the VAT to 5%, is because the loss in VAT revenue will be £2.2bn. Yes £2.2bn. So your statement of a 'small part of the economy', and 'most will be VAT registered businesses' would lose £2.2bn in VAT receipts if reduced from 20% to 5% on works to existing dwellings. This is given in a report from the House of Commons:
The Commercial Secretary to the Treasury (Lord Sassoon): The cost of reducing
VAT from 20 per cent to 5 per cent on repair, maintenance and improvement of
residential property, in the absence of behavioural change, is tentatively estimated to
be in the region of £2.2 billion.
Regarding your other point on whether a reduction to 5% from 20% would encourage people to undertake works, thats a £7500 saving on a £50,000 project. So yes, I think for a lot of people it would be the difference between going ahead or not.
This substantial enough for you, given you've spouted nothing but so far!?