Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Confidence falls at small businesses in the region

- BUSINESS REPORTER business@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

CONFIDENCE among small business owners in the South West has fallen again according to the latest quarterly update from Britain’s biggest business representa­tion group, the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB).

The national survey, which was carried out at the end of December before the latest lockdown restrictio­ns started, revealed the secondlowe­st confidence figures in the tenyear history of the FSB report.

The only figures that were worse were recorded during the first major lockdown last spring.

The survey revealed that around five per cent of the firms questioned across the UK say they expect to close this year, which, if represente­d across the whole SME community, could see 250,000 small businesses shut in 2021.

In the South West more than half of those surveyed said they had seen profits decrease in the final quarter of 2020 with even more expecting them to fall in the coming three months.

And in employment terms, nearly one in four South West small businesses said they had reduced their workforce between October and December.

On a more positive note, small business confidence in the South West, though very low, was higher than the national average and also, even in the midst of the crisis, ten per cent of the region’s firms had increased their workforce.

Overall, however, the report paints a negative picture and the FSB’s South West regional chairman Lee Nathan, whose business has bases in Bristol and Devon, said the survey results were understand­able considerin­g the pressures small businesses are facing at the moment.

He said: “Once again these figures reflect how difficult it is out there for small businesses and they are a stark reminder about why it is so important that the Government continue to find new and innovative ways to help SMEs.

“It is small businesses who will be part of the solution for economic recovery but they can only do it if they get that extra support now.

“Helping small businesses is not a giveaway – it is an investment in the future.”

Reflecting on the national report findings, FSB chairman Mike Cherry said it was time for the Government to act quickly to help restore ailing confidence.

“The developmen­t of business support measures has not kept pace with intensifyi­ng restrictio­ns. As a result, we risk losing hundreds of thousands of great, ultimately viable small businesses this year, at huge cost to local communitie­s and individual livelihood­s.

“At the outset of the first national lockdown, the UK Government was bold. The support mechanisms put in place weren’t perfect, but they were an exceptiona­lly good starting point. That’s why it’s so disappoint­ing that it met the second lockdown with a whimper. This Government can stem losses and protect the businesses of the future – but only if it acts now,” said Mr Cherry.

 ??  ?? FSB’s South West regional chairman Lee Nathan
FSB’s South West regional chairman Lee Nathan

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