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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Emer Scully

Fears numerous chippies will close as rising prices mean cod and chips could cost £13

Chippies are being battered by rising costs, with thousands feared near to closure.

One expert says half of all our fish and chip shops will shut if the Government presses ahead with a controversial VAT rise. Others will stop selling fish and revert to other options such as burgers and kebabs.

The warning came from Andrew Crook, president of the National Federation of Fish Friers, who reckons up to 3,000 chippies could go in the next five years.

Mr Crook, who owns Skippers of Euxton in Lancashire, said customers pay £5.60 for a cod that costs him £4. And while an 18kg case of cod cost £150 before the pandemic, it has shot up to £230.

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There are calls on the Government to scrap the rising VAT costs (Getty Images)

“I won’t be making money now,” he said. “It’s going to be very difficult to pull through this. We work on a very tight margin in fish and chips and after the pandemic, prices started going through the roof.

“This was before we feel the effects from Ukraine.”

He added: “A large cod and chips is going to go to around £12 or £13.”

Some 40% of imported fish is from Russia, which is now sanctioned, Mr Crook added. And 50% of sunflower oil used by chippies is from Ukraine.

The cost has shot up since the pandemic (Getty Images/Bloomberg Creative Photos)

He added: “ Palm oil used to be £13 a box, we’re now up to £23 a pot and that’s before we run out of sunflower oil. That will disappear because it’s from Ukraine.”

Mr Crook wants the Treasury to scrap its plan to increase VAT by 7.5% because “it is going to put a lot of businesses under”.

The sales tax, now at 12.5%, returns to its pre-pandemic rate of 20% next month.

He added: “A lot of shops are at the lower end of the industry – husband and wife teams, it’s getting more and more difficult for them to run a business. We’ll see a lot of those go quite quickly. ”

Chippies are being battered by rising costs (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

David Hanbury, who owns a chippie in Torquay, Devon, said the situation was “a perfect storm of economic disaster”.

He could soon be charging £10.60 for cod and chips, he said.

Mr Hanbury, who has worked in the industry for 40 years, said he had never before known a year with all prices going up at once.

He added: “We’re going to put our prices up in a customer base that’s also feeling the pinch. I’ve never known such a disastrous set of circumstances.”

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