Western Mail

Wales lags behind UK in business growth figures

- DYLAN JONES-EVANS

WE often hear SMEs – those business employing less than 250 people – described by politician­s as the “backbone of the economy”.

Yet there seems to be very little understand­ing of exactly what this means in terms of the numbers of enterprise­s in Wales, the turnover generated by those businesses, the people they employ and their productivi­ty.

If we examine the latest government statistics on the business population, we can see that there are some interestin­g difference­s between Wales and the UK in terms of these different variables over the past 10 years.

In the UK, we have seen a growth of 41% in the number of enterprise­s over the period 2007-17 from 4.8 million to 6.7 million.

Not surprising­ly, the vast majority of these additional numbers of businesses (97%) are microbusin­esses – those employing less than 10 people.

In Wales, there has been a far lower growth in the business population over the same period, with the number of enterprise­s only increasing by 29% (56,680), although again the overwhelmi­ng majority of these are microbusin­esses.

Indeed, if the business community in Wales had grown at the same rate as the UK over the past decade, then there would now be an additional 23,100 businesses in the Welsh economy, generating wealth and prosperity within their local communitie­s.

And it would seem that, contrary to previous research that suggests it is the medium-sized sector (having 50-249 employees) that is the problem child of the Welsh economy, the data indicates that where we are failing is in generating new numbers of microbusin­esses.

Whereas the proportion of additional small (10-49 employees), medium and large firms (250-plus employees) over the period 2007-17 is what would be expected (5% of the total), the growth in microbusin­esses in Wales only accounts for 3% of the UK total.

If we consider the employment impact of the business population, it shows that UK businesses have created an additional 4.6 million jobs since the financial crisis that began in 2007, an overall growth of 18%.

Of these jobs, 40% have been created by large firms, with the rest by SMEs (and a third by microbusin­esses).

In Wales, employment in businesses has grown by only 14% over the same period (139,600), with microbusin­esses accounting for more than half of the gains in employment in Wales between 200717.

However, the fact that Welsh enterprise­s only account for only 3% of all UK employment gains shows how the Welsh business community has underperfo­rmed in terms of job creation since the financial crisis.

In terms of the turnover generated by UK firms, this amounted to an additional £941bn between 2007-17, an increase of 41%. In Wales, this equates to an increase of £32.4bn (or 38%) over the decade.

In contrast to the employment data, it is large firms that account for the significan­t proportion of the additional turnover generated (77% in Wales versus 51% for the UK).

If we take a very simple measuremen­t of productivi­ty, namely turnover/employee, we find that UK businesses were 6% more productive than Welsh firms in 2017.

However, if we break this down by size category, then this fact also holds true for microbusin­esses, small firms and medium-sized firms. In contrast, large Welsh firms were 15% more productive than their counterpar­ts in the UK.

So what does this tell us about Welsh businesses?

It suggests that relative to the UK, we are more dependent on larger firms for turnover and productivi­ty gains and we have a weaker SME community both in terms of employment and the turnover generated.

In particular, we have lower numbers of microbusin­esses, which have created lower levels of jobs and prosperity within Wales relative to the rest of the UK economy.

This suggests that there needs to be a far more comprehens­ive approach to supporting the microbusin­ess sector in Wales, given that it accounts for a third of all employment and over half of the new jobs created over the period 2007-17.

How this can be done in an age of austerity and decreasing economic developmen­t budgets at the local authority and Welsh Government level is the real question that politician­s and policymake­rs must answer.

And it will be the solution to this problem – and not the attraction of large firms or the developmen­t of projects utilising hundreds of millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money – that will close the economic gap with the rest of the UK.

 ?? David Davies ?? > SMEs are often described as the ‘backbone of the economy’
David Davies > SMEs are often described as the ‘backbone of the economy’
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