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Enterprise

Budget 2023: East Midlands bosses criticise ‘resounding disappointment for SMEs’ but welcome child care help

One expert said SMEs were the big losers when many needed help the most

Eileen Perry MBE DL is managing director of ER Recruitment

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt set out a string of measures in his 2023 Spring Budget promising to revitalise the economy, help households and boost business.

The Chancellor said the Office for Budget Responsibility had suggested the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ would sidestep a “technical recession” and that – in the months after the disastrous Lizz Truss/Kwasi Kwarteng mini-budget – “debt servicing costs are down, mortgage rates are lower and inflation has peaked”.

He said his Budget for Growth offered “prosperity with a purpose”, the best investment incentives in Europe and biggest ever employment package – adding that the “optimists” had been right all along.

Labour leader Kier Starmer, however, said Britain was sick of being the “sick man of Europe” and the country could no longer afford the Tories. He said generous tax-free pensions allowances to encourage highly paid doctors to stay in the NHS for longer, for instance, were just a “permanent tax cut” for the wealthy.

While some business leaders welcomed the Budget, others said the Government had failed to go far enough to help those who needed it the most.

Nicholas Smith, director and head of tax at East Midlands chartered accountants Duncan & Toplis, called it a “resounding disappointment for SMEs across the East Midlands and the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ” as the cost of living crisis brought many to their knees.

He said: “Despite rolling reforms across sectors, the announced support to incentivise investment and boost the economy simply isn’t enough.

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt seems focused exclusively on easing cash flow concerns for larger businesses – but it leaves SMEs to fend for themselves at a point when consumer confidence and spending is plummeting and prices continue to climb.