The Pak Banker

UK businesses face ‘bleak’ outlook after poor end to 2022

- LONDON -REUTERS

British businesses are gloomy about prospects for 2023 as they face the likelihood of a surge energy bills and ongoing post-Brexit trade difficulti­es, the British Chambers of Commerce said late on Wednesday.

The BCC’s quarterly economic survey the largest private-sector survey of business sentiment showed that 36 per cent of businesses expect lower profits this year, compared with 34 per cent who expect a rise. The proportion expecting higher sales over the next 12 months dropped to 44 per cent from 54 per cent six months earlier.

The survey took place from Nov. 7 to Nov. 30 and received responses from more than 5,600 firms, mostly smaller businesses.

“The situation remains critical for the majority of SMEs who find themselves cut adrift by monumental inflationa­ry pressures, often driving triple-digit percentage cost increases, particular­ly on energy,” the BCC’s head of research, David Bharier, said.

A current 18 billion pound ($22 billion) programme of energy subsidies for businesses expires at the end of March, and earlier on the Wednesday the government said it would publish new plans next week.

However, finance minister Jeremy Hunt warned businesses that he viewed the current system as unsustaina­ble, and that any future support would be on a smaller scale.

“The outlook from businesses remains bleak,” BCC director general Shevaun Haviland said. “Providing businesses with clarity regarding the new energy support package must be top of the government’s agenda,” she added.

Smaller businesses continued to face difficulty trading with the European Union after Brexit, and also when sending goods between mainland Britain and Northern Ireland, due to the EU’s requiremen­t for checks on British goods moving to the province, which has an open border with EU member state Ireland.

 ?? -AP ?? BOSTON
William "Rick" Singer, the California college admissions consultant who mastermind­ed the vast fraud and bribery scheme at the center of the US college admissions scandal known as "Varsity Blues", arrives for his sentencing hearing at the federal courthouse in Massachuse­tts, US.
-AP BOSTON William "Rick" Singer, the California college admissions consultant who mastermind­ed the vast fraud and bribery scheme at the center of the US college admissions scandal known as "Varsity Blues", arrives for his sentencing hearing at the federal courthouse in Massachuse­tts, US.

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