º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

Our SMES still need support: North West business leaders react to Rachel Reeves' Spring Statement

Accountant warns Government may be restricted by its own 'shackles'

Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves delivering her spring statement to MPs in the House of Commons(Image: PA)

The Government still has a lot of work to do to win the confidence of business in the North West – that’s the message from the region’s business leaders and economic experts after the Chancellor’s Spring statement.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves promised to “boost Britain’s defence industry and to make the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ a defence industrial superpower”. That could be good news for the region’s aerospace and defence sector. And Ms Reeves highlighted the impact her plans could have on Barrow-in-Furness. She said: “We will take forward our Plan for Barrow, a town at the heart of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ nuclear security, working with (MP Michelle Scrogham) and providing £200 million, supporting the creation of thousands of jobs.”

But analysts said there was too little in the statement for SMEs, who are being hard hit by rising costs and by the upcoming National Insurance rises.

Meanwhile, the Office for Budget Responsibility halved its forecast for growth in gross domestic product (GDP) this year from 2% to just 1%. The OBR also suggested the Chancellor would have missed her goal of balancing the nation’s books without action. Rachel Reeves blamed “increased global uncertainty" for the news.

The OBR also said real household disposable income (RHDI) per person would grow at about 0.5% on average each year between 2025 and 2030. This is higher than the last forecast, thanks to stronger wage growth. The Chancellor said working people were “still feeling the pinch” after the cost-of-living crisis, but that the new projections show “living standards will rise twice as fast this Parliament compared to last”.


FSB: ‘The whole of Government’ must back our SMEs and lower tax burden

Phil McCabe, from the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) in Merseyside and Cheshire, said: “Today’s growth figures are a stark reminder of the urgent need to get the economy moving. The whole of Government must now step up and produce credible, pro-small business plans to achieve that.

“Every Government department bears responsibility for growth and every cabinet minister must come forward at the upcoming spending review with proper plans to back small business growth and therefore growing the economy as a whole. From better programmes to support small business tech adoption, to introducing a Statutory Sick Pay rebate to help cover the extra costs being imposed on small employers, small firms want to see Government money well spent and targeted to support growth.”

The FSB’s latest quarterly Small Business Index showed confidence levels among small businesses were at their lowest since the first year of the pandemic.