CEO of @IoH_Online. Expert Panel Member for the All Party Parliamentary Group on Modernising Employment. Visiting Professor @UlsterUni. Charity Trustee.
In the UK, a pint of beer carries both 20% VAT and around 56p in alcohol duty.
In Switzerland, the same pint carries 8.1% VAT and around 13p in alcohol duty.
Switzerland treats hospitality as a national economic asset, with the profession enjoying formal recognition and policy support from government bodies. In return, Swiss hospitality employs 4% of the national workforce, contributes up to 6% of GDP, creates community hubs, develops its people, and plays a central role in strengthening the economy.
It’s a Wednesday evening in Lucerne, Switzerland, and every restaurant and bar is full, no businesses are closed, the atmosphere is joyous, and the welcome and service are both first-class.
And it's a real-world example of how balanced taxation and government recognition can drive economic growth, skills development, and thriving communities.
#HospitalityFamily #HospitalityMatters #TaxReform #GlobalHospitality #Switzerland #LearningFromOthers #InspireMotivateLearn #imin
Reform's candidate for Makerfield walked into a BBC Question Time by-election special tonight and didn't walk out of it in one piece.
Robert Kenyon arrived carrying the weight of a week in which his party leader called for "pure cold rage," refused to condemn disorder at PMQs, and told Times Radio the violence was "just the beginning." His job was to deliver Reform's message to a live audience two weeks before polling day. He did not manage it.
Kenyon had already deleted all of his previous social media accounts after posts emerged in which he agreed with a user saying he wanted to "smell and lick" an intimate area belonging to Carol Vorderman, and others in which he directly identified as a sexist and attacked women who had undergone abortions. He had dismissed the posts as "squaddie humour." Vorderman sent an open letter to 6,000 female voters in Makerfield ahead of tonight's programme.
Within minutes of the show opening, a woman in the audience told Kenyon she would rather have a career politician than a sexist. He was asked directly to apologise to Vorderman. He deflected. Later, a member of the LGBTQ+ community called him a sexist from the floor. He had been called it twice before Fiona Bruce reached the two-tier policing question, the one Farage spent the entire week building toward nationally.
When it came, Kenyon fumbled it. The erms and the you-knows took over. The media training, visible throughout as a series of mechanical pivots to party lines, fell apart precisely when the stakes were highest.
He eventually said he condemned the Southampton violence. It took two public accusations of sexism and most of the programme to get there. Farage could not say the same words in Parliament on Wednesday.
On Reform's pledge of 30,000 extra police officers, Kenyon was asked how the party would fund and deliver it. His answer: that's a problem for whoever is in charge of that. The audience laughed.
On the Green Belt question, local, specific, the kind of thing Makerfield voters actually care about, he pivoted to immigration. The room had already decided by then.
An audience member put the sharpest question of the night: how can you trust a leader who took a £5 million donation not to sell off the Green Belt to the highest bidder? Kenyon's answer was that it's going through Parliament, so it's not his problem. Three times in one evening, on three different questions, some variant of not my problem.
Andy Burnham did the opposite of all of it. He said plainly that if he wins Makerfield he will run for Prime Minister. He pointed to crime falling in Greater Manchester as the record he would take forward nationally. He said he would take a serious look at the knife exemptions for religious purposes. No pivots. No deflections. Actual positions, stated plainly, in front of an audience that responded to every one of them, including, at points, the Conservative candidate getting warmer applause than Kenyon in a Labour heartland.
Kenyon said this morning that Makerfield was a win-win, that even a loss would give Labour a bloody nose. Tonight looked more like a write-off.
The by-election is 18 June. Polymarket has Burnham at 74%.
#bbcqt
One of the highlights of the year is welcoming the new Master Innholders at Innholders’ Hall, and this year was no different.
It was also a pleasure to spend time with our Institute of Hospitality President, The Rt Hon The Viscount Thurso PC FIH MI, and Miles Pooley FIH MI, who kindly hosted me at the magnificent RAF Club in Piccadilly.
Congratulations to all those beginning their journey as Master Innholders.
#MeetingOurMembers #IMIN #HospitalityFamily
Our vital UK hospitality sector is currently facing the highest levels of taxation in its history, and when businesses are under sustained financial pressure, investment in people is always the first area to suffer. Recruitment, professional development, and pathways into meaningful careers are now at risk.
We are already seeing the consequences reflected in national employment figures, particularly among those seeking their first opportunity in the workplace. Hospitality has long been one of the UK's most important entry points into employment, providing people from all backgrounds with the opportunity to gain skills, experience and rewarding long-term careers. However, when the cost of doing business continues to rise, the ability of employers to invest in recruitment, training and career development is inevitably reduced.
Yet hospitality remains one of the United Kingdom's most important economic and social contributors. It supports communities, creates opportunities for social mobility, provides rewarding careers, and helps millions of people develop valuable skills for life.
I am grateful to @RosieDuffield1 MP for bringing together hospitality operators, industry leaders, including @Sacha_Lord FIH, former Night Time Economy Adviser to Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham, and parliamentarians in Parliament this week to discuss the case for aligning hospitality VAT with our European counterparts. A more competitive VAT rate would not simply support businesses, it would help unlock investment in people, skills and jobs, delivering significant economic and social benefits for communities across the United Kingdom.
#HospitalityFamily #VATSTheProblem #StrongerTogether
@hmurray9@MichelinGuideUK Another day, another hardworking hospitality businesses closed. My heart goes out to everyone who is loosing their livelihoods, businesses and homes. Many of these are IoH members, so we are hearing how devastating things are, first hand.
Absolutely shocking, the whole rates revaluation is ambiguous at best, and has resulted in a huge amount of closures. @Sacha_Lord@MickKill and I were discussing today just how bad this is for our sector, and how this is another reason why we have the highest rate of Hospitality businesses closures in history.
Thank you, I do understand where they are coming from, health and hygiene requirements are absolute and essential, and not to be ignored, however there needs to be support to enable businesses to continue to trade in difficult times, not just warning letters.
I will raise this when I meet @RosieDuffield1
It was a pleasure to meet Ben Fletcher, candidate to become the first Mayor of the new Cheshire and Warrington Combined Authority, at the Abode Hotel in Chester today.
Hospitality is a cornerstone of the Cheshire economy, and in these challenging times, it was encouraging to hear Ben’s commitment to ensuring our sector receives the support it needs should he be elected. I was particularly pleased by his recognition that hospitality must sit at the heart of any future skills agenda under the Mayor’s office, especially in light of today’s deeply concerning news regarding a potential “lost generation” in employment, education and training.
Now more than ever, creating opportunities for young people must be central to any legislative agenda, because hospitality remains one of the very best platforms for the next generation to grow, develop and thrive.
#StrongerTogether #HospitalityFamily #InspireMotivateLearn #Cheshire
It's our 88th birthday! 🎉
We are proud to be the world's leading professional body for the hospitality industry and to have been at the heart of global hospitality for 88 years.
Find out more about why our members have said #imin to the Institute of Hospitality for 88 years.
https://t.co/LRLRPC8Oaz
#88thBirthday #88Years #IoH #InstituteofHospitality
@RBWR
@RosieDuffield1@julesserkin@canterburycc Likewise Rosie, I live in Canterbury but work internationally, the current volume of challenges hospitality has in the UK - and Canterbury - is obscene.
I've forwarded a document to your office via Cerys Bear, and look forward to speaking with you next week.
Only in Manchester would I meet an astrophysicist who retrained to join the vibrant hospitality scene offered by this great city.
That was just one of many takeaways from this week’s Institute of Hospitality networking event, where we asked the question: “What drives hospitality success in the North?”
Thank you to my panellists, Sacha Lord FIH, Laura Green, Stewart Morrell MIH, and Jonathan Baillie, for such a valuable discussion covering the incredible diversity of talent, passion, and opportunity that continues to shape hospitality across the region, alongside the excitement surrounding Andy Burnham’s vision for not just the city, but the country.
Following the event, it was a pleasure to catch up with our Chair, Martin Traynor OBE FIH, and @Sacha_Lord over dinner, discussing exciting future plans for our global #HospitalityFamily.
Manchester is such a vital part of the UK’s hospitality and tourism industry, and it is always a huge pleasure to spend time with our members in this vibrant city. Thank you to my colleagues Aymen Fetouak MIH and Emma Ellis MIH, for managing this latest opportunity to meet our members in the North.
#imin #MeetingOurMembers #Manchester #StrongerTogether
We are proud to announce that our CEO, Robert Richardson FIH MI, is to be awarded an Honorary Doctorate in Hospitality by the @wlv_uni, in recognition of his outstanding contribution to the global hospitality profession, leadership of the Institute of Hospitality, and commitment to advancing professional standards, education and inclusion across the sector.
The honorary doctorate will be awarded by the University during its summer graduation ceremonies in late July.
Congratulations from all the IoH Team and global #HospitalityFamily on this remarkable achievement! 🎉
To read the full story, please follow the link below.
https://t.co/udFMqfewu9
#UniversityofWolverhampton #HospitalityLeadership #IoH #imin
We are thrilled to announce the launch of the Institute of Hospitality’s 2027 Annual Charity Golf Day, in collaboration with @TheBelfryHotel and our strategic partners, @ntiaofficial.
📅 Date: Thursday, 13 May 2027
⛳️ Location: The Belfry Hotel & Resort, near Birmingham
This event promises to be more than just a golf tournament, hosted at one of the UK’s most renowned golf resorts.
🌟18 holes of championship golf
🌟On-course competitions
🌟Evening garden party with BBQ and music
🌟Spa day package options
🌟Networking
The proceeds will support the charitable work of the Institute’s Youth Council and Night Time Industries Association, which aids businesses across the UK’s vibrant night-time economy.
Find out more https://t.co/oHa7JpnHlO
#IoHGolfDay2027 #NTIA #HospitalityFamily #TheBelfry
@RBWR
A pleasure to join Chair Stefan Micevski MBA FIH, the Hospitality Association York, Institute of Hospitality members, and the CEOs of UKHospitality and Hospitality Action, Allen Simpson and Mark Lewis FIH, alongside Institute of Hospitality Chair Martin Traynor OBE, FIH, MIoD, for the Hospitality Association York annual social.
#HospitalityFamily #imin #MeetingOurMembers