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Economic Development

The year in North East business: how political upheaval hit local firms

It was a year of turmoil in the political and economic worlds, impacting on businesses everywhere

The race to find a new Tory leader has begun after Liz Truss resigned yesterday(Image: Getty Images)

When the Collins Dictionary revealed that ‘permacrisis’ was its word of the year for 2022, many business leaders may have allowed themselves a wry smile of agreement.

It’s hard to remember when there has not been some form of upheaval in the economy for businesses to deal with, the financial crash of 2008-9 having been followed by the Brexit referendum, the pandemic and now the cost-of-living crisis. This year has seen the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ have three Prime Ministers, four Chancellors and three Business Secretaries – hardly a recipe for stable conditions in which to do business.

The cost-of-living crisis is also a cost-of-doing-business crisis, and that issue will be very much on most business leaders’ minds as 2022 turns into 2023. Soaring inflation means a toxic mix of rising costs and lower customer spending for many companies; the fact that energy bills, unavoidable as they are, have been a major component of those costs, only adds to those worries.

Read more : Parkdean Resorts hoping for year of staycations

As things stand, Government support for businesses on energy bills has provided welcome respite, but that support is only confirmed to run until April. A number of business groups have called for Chancellor Jeremy Hunt to be clear on how energy support will continue past April with that announcement now knocked into next year.

Mr Hunt last week announced that his next Budget will be released on March 15, much too late for companies waiting for support. A poll of firms by the British Chambers of Commerce revealed that almost half (47%) of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ SMEs said they would find it difficult to pay their energy bills when Government support is due to end. Separate research from the Federation of Small Businesses found that one in four small firms (24%) plan to close, downsize or restructure if energy relief comes to a sharp end in April.

As well as seeking Government support, businesses will be hoping 2023 is the year when the Government’s much-vaunted ‘levelling up’ programme becomes more than a slogan.

Like the Northern Powerhouse before it, levelling up has become both a catch-all for anything positive to happen outside London and a stick to beat the Government with any time something goes wrong. February’s publication of the Government’s Levelling Up White Paper at least put some substance on to the flimsy slogan, but the political turmoil that has engulfed the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ since then has only increased concerns that levelling up is strong on good intentions, but weaker on concrete action.