Tag Archive for Federation of Small Businesses

How much national insurance hike will cost your business

By Timothy Adler on Small Business – Advice and Ideas for UK Small Businesses and SMEs

Businesses have criticised government for a national insurance hike of 1.25 per cent each for both employers and staff – a combined 3 per cent rise – as firms are only just recovering from the pandemic.

Economists have warned the £11bn national insurance contribution (NIC) hike will create unemployment and stifle future job creation.

The new health and social care levy will generate in total £14bn a year, which falls to a net £12bn of income as some will be paid by public sector workers. About £11bn will come from NICs and £600m from increasing tax on dividends.

Mike Cherry, chairman of the Federation of Small Businesses, said: “Business owners who have done all they can to retain and support their staff during the pandemic are now being punished for that loyalty with an £11bn increase in NICs, which essentially serve as a jobs tax.”

Andrew Goodacre, chief executive of the British Independent Retailers Association, said: “Of all the options available to the Government, it is disappointing that increases in national insurance have been chosen because of the impact on lower paid workers and small businesses … despite all

Read more...

How much national insurance hike will cost your business

By Timothy Adler on Small Business – Advice and Ideas for UK Small Businesses and SMEs

Businesses have criticised government for a national insurance hike of 1.25 per cent each for both employers and staff – a combined 3 per cent rise – as firms are only just recovering from the pandemic.

Economists have warned the £11bn national insurance contribution (NIC) hike will create unemployment and stifle future job creation.

The new health and social care levy will generate in total £14bn a year, which falls to a net £12bn of income as some will be paid by public sector workers. About £11bn will come from NICs and £600m from increasing tax on dividends.

Mike Cherry, chairman of the Federation of Small Businesses, said: “Business owners who have done all they can to retain and support their staff during the pandemic are now being punished for that loyalty with an £11bn increase in NICs, which essentially serve as a jobs tax.”

Andrew Goodacre, chief executive of the British Independent Retailers Association, said: “Of all the options available to the Government, it is disappointing that increases in national insurance have been chosen because of the impact on lower paid workers and small businesses … despite all

Read more...

Tweet your questions to FSB policy boss Craig Beaumont

By Small Business Team on Small Business – Advice and Ideas for UK Small Businesses and SMEs
On 8 July SmallBusiness.co.uk will be hosting a special one-off Twitter Q&A with Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) policy boss Craig Beaumont at 4:30pm.
Craig is chief of external affairs at the FSB, which means he has the ear of politicians when it comes to them making policy decisions affecting our businesses.
To join in, just follow @smallbusinessuk and tweet your questions to Craig now using the hashtag #AskFSB.
Remember, you can only tweet your questions to Craig through the @smallbusinessuk Twitter feed.
Craig will answer any questions about running your small business, particularly where government support measures for those that should be allowed to fully reopen on 19 July in England are concerned.

Bounce Back Loans
The looming review of business rates
The lack of income support for directors
Brexit
What HMRC is doing and what Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak can and should be doing to get Covid-ravaged small businesses back on their feet

Craig Beaumont knows better than anyone what our politicians might be persuaded to do to help small business, so send him your questions now using #AskFSB.
The post Tweet your questions to FSB policy boss Craig Beaumont appeared first

Read more...

#AskFSB: tweet your questions to FSB policy boss Craig Beaumont

Originally written by Small Business Team on Small Business
On 8 July SmallBusiness.co.uk will be hosting a special one-off Twitter Q&A with Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) policy boss Craig Beaumont. You can post questions anytime using the hashtag #AskFSB. Craig will then respond to your questions from 4:30pm on 8 July.
Craig is chief of external affairs at the FSB, which means he has the ear of politicians when it comes to them making policy decisions affecting our businesses.
To join in, just follow @smallbusinessuk and tweet your questions to Craig now using the hashtag #AskFSB.
Remember, you can only tweet your questions to Craig through the @smallbusinessuk Twitter feed.
Craig will answer any questions about running your small business, particularly where government support measures for those that should be allowed to fully reopen on 19 July in England are concerned.

Bounce Back Loans
The looming review of business rates
The lack of income support for directors
Brexit
What HMRC is doing and what Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak can and should be doing to get Covid-ravaged small businesses back on their feet

Craig Beaumont knows better than anyone what our politicians might be persuaded to do to help small business, so send him your questions now using #AskFSB.
 
#AskFSB: tweet your questions

Read more...

#AskFSB: tweet your questions to FSB policy boss Craig Beaumont

Originally written by Small Business Team on Small Business
On 8 July SmallBusiness.co.uk will be hosting a special one-off Twitter Q&A with Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) policy boss Craig Beaumont at 4:30pm.
Craig is chief of external affairs at the FSB, which means he has the ear of politicians when it comes to them making policy decisions affecting our businesses.
To join in, just follow @smallbusinessuk and tweet your questions to Craig now using the hashtag #AskFSB.
Remember, you can only tweet your questions to Craig through the @smallbusinessuk Twitter feed.
Craig will answer any questions about running your small business, particularly where government support measures for those that should be allowed to fully reopen on 19 July in England are concerned.

Bounce Back Loans
The looming review of business rates
The lack of income support for directors
Brexit
What HMRC is doing and what Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak can and should be doing to get Covid-ravaged small businesses back on their feet

Craig Beaumont knows better than anyone what our politicians might be persuaded to do to help small business, so send him your questions now using #AskFSB.
 
#AskFSB: tweet your questions to FSB policy boss Craig Beaumont

Read more...

#AskFSB: tweet your questions to FSB policy boss Craig Beaumont

Originally written by Small Business Team on Small Business
On 8 July SmallBusiness.co.uk will be hosting a special one-off Twitter Q&A with Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) policy boss Craig Beaumont.
Craig is chief of external affairs at the FSB, which means he has the ear of politicians when it comes to them making policy decisions affecting our businesses.
To join in, just follow @smallbusinessuk and tweet your questions to Craig now using the hashtag #AskFSB.
Remember, you can only tweet your questions to Craig through the @smallbusinessuk Twitter feed.
Craig will answer any questions about running your small business, particularly where government support measures for those that should be allowed to fully reopen on 19 July in England are concerned.

Bounce Back Loans
The looming review of business rates
The lack of income support for directors
Brexit
What HMRC is doing and what Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak can and should be doing to get Covid-ravaged small businesses back on their feet

Craig Beaumont knows better than anyone what our politicians might be persuaded to do to help small business, so send him your questions now using #AskFSB.
 
#AskFSB: tweet your questions to FSB policy boss Craig Beaumont

Read more...

#AskFSB: tweet your questions to FSB policy boss Craig Beaumont

Originally written by Small Business Team on Small Business
On 8 July SmallBusiness.co.uk will be hosting a special one-off Twitter Q&A with Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) policy boss Craig Beaumont.
Craig is chief of external affairs at the FSB, which means he has the ear of politicians when it comes to them making policy decisions affecting our businesses.
To join in, just follow @smallbusinessuk and tweet your questions to Craig now using the hashtag #AskFSB.
Remember, you can only tweet your questions to Craig through the @smallbusinessuk Twitter feed.
Craig will answer any questions about running your small business, particularly where government support measures for those that should be allowed to fully reopen on 19 July in England are concerned.

Bounce Back Loans
The looming review of business rates
The lack of income support for directors
Brexit
What HMRC is doing and what Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak can and should be doing to get Covid-ravaged small businesses back on their feet

Craig Beaumont knows better than anyone what our politicians might be persuaded to do to help small business, so send him your questions now using #AskFSB.
 
#AskFSB: tweet your questions to FSB policy boss Craig Beaumont

Read more...

Quarter of a million small businesses set to fold without more Covid help

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Over 250,000 small businesses are set to close this year without further Covid financial help, according to the latest FSB study.
Five per cent of small businesses surveyed said they do not expect to struggle on beyond 2021.
One in five small businesses made staff redundant between October and December last year. One in seven expect to do so before April.
>See also: Small business calls for multibillion-pound Covid-19 support package
The quarterly Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) Small Business Index (SBI) showed confidence at second lowest ebb in report’s 10-year history.
And the cohort expecting profits to fall in the first quarter this year hit an all-time high, with exporters having to deal with EU red tape as the UK-EU trade deal shakes down.
Mike Cherry, chairman of the FSB, said that although small business has welcomed the Covid help lifelines thrown to the retail, hospitality and leisure sectors, the government must realise that the small community is wider than that.
Nothing has been done for company directors, the newly self-employed and those who do not use commercial premises, Mr Cherry said.
>See also: Which small businesses can stay open in national lockdown?
Last week, the FSB published a five-point plan

Read more...

Small business calls for multibillion-pound Covid-19 support package

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Small business has asked the chancellor for a multibillion support package to help get it through to the other side of the pandemic.
Mike Cherry, national chairman of the Federation of Small Businesses, has written to Rishi Sunak outlining his proposed small business support package.
Measures include a second round of £10,000 grants, a new German-style reimbursement scheme for lost trading, improved terms for state-backed Bounce Back Loans and income support for the newly self-employed.
>See also: Rishi Sunak urged to help self-employed company directors
Small businesses with fewer than 50 employees account for 99 per cent of all businesses in the UK. SMEs account for three fifths of all employment in the private sector.
In particular, the FSB has called for:

Small Business cash grants – a second round of one-off grants of £10,000 through the Small Business Grant Fund (SBGF), plus targeted grants of up to £25,000 for small firms in retail, hospitality and leisure
Revenue Loss Scheme – a German-style scheme to reimburse small businesses for the financial impact of a significant loss in custom, whereby the government would cover a percentage of lost revenue compared to the same time last year. The German version of this

Read more...

Turn Covid emergency debt into shared ownership, urges small business

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
The government should consider converting “unmanageable” levels of Covid debt into shared company ownership, the Federation of Small Businesses has urged.
Four out of 10 small businesses called their level of debt “unmanageable” in a FSB report published over the weekend.
Nearly half of those surveyed used personal finance products such as personal credit cards, overdrafts and loans to keep their businesses going.
Shared ownership means employees owning shares in the businesses they work for. Famous employee-owned businesses include John Lewis and, most recently, Richer Sounds, which was taken over by its employees in May last year.
Currently, 370 UK companies are categorised as employee-ownership SME businesses, 61 per cent have changed ownership in just the past five years.
Employee-owned businesses in Britain are currently worth £20.1bn between them, employing 178,000 people.
The FSB told The Times that emergency Covid debt could be assigned to an employee ownership trust in return for the trust getting preference shares in the business of the same value, plus an option to acquire 10 per cent of the business when there is a future change of control. Turning Covid debt into shared ownership would move the debt off the company’s balance sheet, the

Read more...