I think if councils want to keep local shops
"If" noted ...
they need to rebalance rates for bricks and mortar on high streets and up rates for warehouses that distribute goods bought over the internet.
that's a government thing, not local council. It can join the queue behind you-know-what....
When I was running DFs business - 20+ years ago, which wasn't a shop, but a motor repair business, we needed to make around £200 a week before the doors opened. That was around £3,000 rates, £3,000 insurance. standing changes on gas, electric, plus certified waste removal, plus maintenance for plant, and building.
(Not a penny on rent, or motgage as it was owned outright)
£200 a week is £33.33 a day - assuming a 6-day week.
I'll say it again, that was all before the doors opened. Then you had to factor in wages, stock, advertising dealing with guarantees (because if a part failed, the labour to replace it came out of our bottom line).
And then some clown would grumble about paying £5 to have their tyres checked and windscreen topped up. And to cap that, some of them would walk away accusing us of "ripping me off, man, you're just trying to make money out of people."
The more DF tried to get me to follow the family business, the less I wanted to. I may have had to endure redundancy a few times, but at least I'm not running a business 24/7.
As I moved away, the UBR started kicking in. Rates on the workshop were to rise to c. £10,000 over a few years.