The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Group says protecting small businesses should be priority

Federation of Small Businesses insists deal must take local firms into account

- Jamie buchan jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

The Tay Cities Deal must aid and protect small businesses which generate around £4.5 billion for the local economy, traders have warned.

The call by the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) comes as new figures show Dundee City Council is falling behind the national average in how much it spends on local small and medium-sized enterprise­s.

Launching its election manifesto, local FSB officials say Perth and Kinross Council’s incoming administra­tion must make sure the Tay City Deal’s proposed £1.84bn investment will benefit local companies.

Incoming council leaders will be put under pressure to appoint a “small business champion” to safeguard the region’s 6,000 small and medium-sized enterprise­s.

He or she would become part of the Cities Deal project management office and sit on the joint committee, overseeing delivery of the deal.

Around 95% of businesses in the Perthshire patch account for more than 32,000 — or 60% — of private sector jobs, along with 11,000 self-employed.

And the top sectors in the council area – wholesale, retail, agricultur­e, forestry and fishing – are dominated by small businesses.

Across the Tay region, small businesses generated around £4.5bn for the local economy.

According to the federation’s survey, more than two out of three smaller businesses in the area feel that decisions taken by local authoritie­s are too remote from their communitie­s.

Corrado Mella, chairman for the FSB in Perth and Kinross, said: “The new administra­tion must ensure that the Tay Cities Deal reflects the broad range of businesses across the catchment area.

“In Perth and Kinross, the vast majority of these are micro and small businesses, many operating in rural areas. If the deal is to make any meaningful impact on the lives of people and communitie­s, it must take account of diversity and the importance of inclusive growth to the Perthshire economy.”

FSB chiefs will also urge Dundee’s new administra­tion to increase spending with local firms.

Statistics collated by the Improvemen­t Service – the national organisati­on tasked with improving local government – show that Dundee City Council spent only 17% of their procuremen­t budget with the area’s smaller firms, compared with a national average of 20%.

Graham Bradley, chairman of FSB’s Dundee and Angus branch, said: “Council budgets are under significan­t pressure.

“That’s why it is important that they squeeze every drop of value out of their spending power.

“Figures show that if councils increased their spend with smaller, local firms by 2% per year, it would generate an extra £3 million per annum for local economies.”

 ??  ?? Graham Bradley, chairman of the Dundee and Angus branch of the Federation of Small Businesses, wants councils to increase spending with local firms.
Graham Bradley, chairman of the Dundee and Angus branch of the Federation of Small Businesses, wants councils to increase spending with local firms.
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