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Daniel Sexton
BBC News, South East
PA Media
Shepherd Neame employs 1,600 people and runs 290 pubs
Britain's oldest brewer has said it will hike its beer prices in response to rising taxes and wage costs taking effect in April.
Shepherd Neame, which is based in Faversham, Kent, and runs 290 pubs primarily in the South East, said the two policies announced by the government last year would cost it about £2.6m a year.
Jonathan Neame, chief executive of Shepherd Neame, said: "We plan to mitigate the majority of these costs over the next 18 months through price increases and cost efficiencies."
The Treasury has been approached for comment.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves increased employer national insurance contributions (NICs) in the October Budget while also raising the minimum wage.
The increase is designed to help fund improvements to public services.
Some companies have criticised the policy for making it more expensive to employ people, with hospitality groups which employ lots of people on lower wages set to be especially hard hit.
Mr Neame, whose company employs about 1,600 people, described the current market as "challenging".
PA Media
Jonathan Neame, chief executive of Shepherd Neame, described the current situation as "challenging"
"The additional costs imposed on our sector are most unwelcome but the business model is flexible and we can adapt to the new circumstances," he said.
"We have an excellent pub estate and our beer business is evolving to meet current consumer tastes and trends."
Shepherd Neame is more than 300 years old and is the oldest company of its type in the UK.
It brews beers under a range of brands including Spitfire, Bishops Finger and Whitstable Bay.
The company said that total beer volumes fell 12.6% in the second half of 2024 compared with the same period the previous year.
Meanwhile, revenue fell slightly to £85m, amid an "increase in pub sales and a decrease in sales from premium bottled ales".
Nonetheless, underlying profit rose nearly 10% to £4.2m after a fall in inflation last year.
Mr Neame said the company had enjoyed a "buoyant" summer, but during the autumn "confidence evaporated in the run-up to the Budget".
"Since then, activity picked up again and we enjoyed record Christmas trading, with good growth on 2023, with many individual pub records exceeded," he said.
He said the increase in labour costs had "undermined business and consumer confidence in the short term", but that he remained "hopeful that the economy will return to a growth trajectory, with net disposable income growing and interest rates falling".
Additional reporting by PA Media.