Skip to main content
NEU job advert
GMB Scotland call for whisky duty freeze
Chancellor of Exchequer Rachel Reeves with Prudence one of the stills which was named after a Gordon Brown speech as Chancellor during a visit to the Sipsmith Distillery in Chiswick West London, October 9, 2025

CHANCELLOR Rachel Reeves must freeze duty on Scotch whisky to save jobs and boost the economy, according to GMB Scotland.

GMB Scotland secretary Louise Gilmour has written to Ms Reeves as she prepares to present her second Budget next month, demanding that duty on Scotch be frozen until at least the end of this parliament – potentially until 2029.

Ms Gilmour wrote: “Vital steps can be taken now to back Scotch whisky amidst global trade uncertainty whilst still protecting public finances.

“A commitment to freeze excise duty throughout this Parliament will provide business confidence in a sector struggling under increased tariffs and taxation, while allowing the benefits of the government’s economic policies to reach our members on the shop floor.”

The industry faced a 10.1 per cent hike in duty under the Tories’ last Budget and an increase in line with the retail price index from Ms Reeves last year.

But according to the Scotch Whisky Association (SWA) the tax actually yielded hundreds of millions less for the Treasury, amid slowing overseas sales. 

Backing the GMB’s call, SWA chief executive Mark Kent, said: “A freeze on spirits duty will bolster the jobs supported by the Scotch Whisky industry and boost Treasury revenue too.

“A multi-year freeze on spirits duty would provide much-needed stability for Scottish and UK businesses and the communities that rely on the industry, allowing them to grow and invest at a time when all businesses are facing pressure.”

The Treasury said: “The Chancellor has been clear that at the Budget she will strike the right balance between making sure we have enough money to fund our public services and ensuring we can bring growth and investment to businesses.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
Features / 3 November 2024
3 November 2024
In the first of two articles, ROBERT GRIFFITHS argues that despite a parliamentary majority, Labour’s timid Budget fails to seize a historic opportunity and lacks the ambition needed to address Britain’s deep social and economic crises
Roz Foyer General Secretary of STUC ahead of Scottish Labour
Britain / 30 October 2024
30 October 2024
But general secretary Roz Foyer says decision to keep two-child cap and winter fuel payment are ‘especially disappointing’