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Economic Development

Mounting debts spark concerns for SMEs as lending tops £100bn

Almost half of SMEs applied for financial support last year, most of them because of cash flow issues

(Image: Andy Commins / Daily Mirror)

Concerns have been expressed after the amount of debt taken on small businesses topped £100bn last year - with more companies seeking help in the North East.

Almost half of SMEs in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ applied for some form of external financial support last year, according to the British Business Bank, a rise from one in eight firms in 2019. Take-up was highest in the North East, thought to be because local lockdowns placed higher burdens on businesses.

That led bank lending to small firms to rise 82% to £104bn. Many of the firms taking loans did so to help cash flow, sparking warnings that late payment by bigger companies is putting hundreds of SMEs at risk of collapse. Around 40% of small firms say the debt they have taken on is “unmanageable”.

The Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) has called for Government-backed loans to be adapted so that companies only start to pay back the amounts owed when they are profitable again.

The plea from the FSB has come as Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey warned that the pace of economic recovery might not be as quick as some are hoping.

FSB chairman Mike Cherry said: “Of the small firms that have recently accessed finance, four in 10 now describe their debt as ‘unmanageable’.

“Many of those in the very hardest hit sectors, not least events, travel and those at the heart of our night time economies, accessed loans last summer in the hope that we’d be out of the woods by Christmas. A lot of them do not fit the narrow definitions of frontline retail, leisure and hospitality so have received little by way of direct government support.

“That three quarters of small firms are accessing finance to help manage cashflow underscores how Covid-linked disruption is exacerbating our late payment crisis, a crisis which destroys 50,000 firms a year at a cost of at least £2.5bn to the economy. Big corporates need to recognise that treating suppliers like credit lines is self-defeating, serving only to embed stress and vulnerability into supply chains.