The Daily Telegraph

Businesses lose appetite to invest amid economic fears

- By Rhiannon Bury

BRITISH businesses have slowed their investment plans down as confidence in the UK economy slips.

Expectatio­ns among businesses for investment growth remain well below the rates of 2014 and 2015, according to the latest Institute of Chartered Accountant­s in England and Wales Business Confidence Monitor.

The membership body’s research found that current levels of investment showed no signs of picking up, along with staff developmen­t budgets, which were growing at a much slower pace than revenues.

The lack of investment was blamed on the fact that confidence among companies had fallen back into negative territory, reversing the gains made in the second quarter of the year.

The index fell from 6.7 in the second quarter to minus 8 in the third quarter of the year, similar to levels at the beginning of 2017.

The snap general election, the threat of a hung parliament and the hesitant progress of negotiatio­ns with the EU

The snap election, threat of a hung parliament and lack of progress in EU talks have increased business caution

mean businesses are now adopting a more cautious approach, the report found. Matthew Rideout, director of business at the ICAEW, said the fall back into negative territory was “not unexpected”.

“The industrial strategy has been lost in the void, coupled with no clear signal towards post-brexit policy,” he said. “As a result, businesses cannot see through this haze of uncertaint­y and are struggling to look further than the end of the next quarter in terms of their decision making.”

He urged businesses to invest in talent and new products in order to position themselves to take advantage of new trading opportunit­ies, and said the Government should make transition­al arrangemen­ts for Brexit clear so companies could start planning.

“They need to be planning now and cannot wait until early 2019 to find out,” he added.

The study also predicted that household incomes were likely to continue to be squeezed as businesses looked to control overall cost rises by holding wage growth to a rate below inflation. It said that the depreciati­on in the value of sterling had not led to faster growth in exports, although overall growth had been maintained.

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