The National (Scotland)

Businesses face better prospects after years of difficulty

- BY LUCY GARCIA

SMALL businesses in Scotland are more optimistic than at any time in the last two years, according to an industry body.

The Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) Small Business Index for the first three months of 2024 shows confidence back into positive territory at plus 10.7, higher than the UK average of plus 5.5.

The organisati­on believes the growing optimism reflects improvemen­ts in consumer spending and the economy more generally.

The FSB cautioned there are clear signs of the strong headwinds continuing to face small businesses, however, as more firms reported falling revenues and staff numbers than experience­d growth.

Andrew McRae, FSB Scotland policy chairman, said: “It is very welcome that we are starting to see the first green shoots of economic recovery, with nearly two in five small businesses in Scotland planning to expand in the coming year.

“But after two hard years of the post-Covid cost-of-doingbusin­ess crisis, we can’t take sustained recovery for granted. Our members’ experience shows it remains a tough business environmen­t with sharply increased costs across the board.

“It’s therefore vital the new First Minister puts growth and the needs of small businesses at the heart of his agenda. That means delivering on the most significan­t planks of the New Deal for Business, and in particular ensuring there is a fuller assessment of the impact on small businesses whenever any new regulation­s are brought forward.”

The SBI found more than a third of small businesses (34.8%) in Scotland expect their performanc­e to improve in the next three months, compared to less than a quarter (24.1%) which expect it will get worse.

The findings represent the most positive outlook since the first three months of 2022 and follow three consecutiv­e quarters of negative sentiment.

The Scottish Government was asked for comment.

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