Monthly Archives: March 2021

UK-EU exports fell by over 40% in January 2021

Originally written by Anna Jordan on Small Business
UK exports to the EU dropped by 40.7 per cent in January 2021, according to ONS figures.
This was the first month after the Brexit transition ended, with customs rules changing and firms contending with extra paperwork. The ONS added that imports were also down by 28.8 per cent (£6.6bn) in January.
> See also: How Brexit is going to affect your business – #2 exports
Much of this is likely to be what the ONS calls ‘temporary factors’. These include concerns around the outcome of the Brexit deal as well predictions of a third lockdown towards the end of 2020. Stockpiling in anticipation of these events were likely to contribute to the fall.
However, there were no similar falls in Britain’s trade in non-EU countries, suggesting that Brexit has been a greater contributing factor.
Yael Selfin, chief economist at KPMG UK, said that Brexit was the most likely reason for doing less business with EU countries, but she foresees a recovery: “The longer term [Brexit] impact on supply chains will depend on how attractive the UK remains and the competition from other locations within the EU,” she said.
The scale of the drop in exports is beyond what most

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Number of small businesses in distress triple pre-Covid level

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
The number of small businesses in distress has tripled compared with the pre-pandemic average, according to figures from accountancy firm Mazars.
This month almost 135,000 businesses are showing strain, as the impact of a year of Covid-19 restrictions reverberates.
Businesses in the services and retail sectors accounted for almost three-fifths of those showing distress, said Mazars. Sectors allowed to reopen were faring better, with construction and manufacturing businesses making up 7.9 per cent and 6.7 per cent of those in distress respectively.
>See also: UK-EU exports fell by over 40% in January 2021
Paul Rouse, partner at accountancy firm Mazars, said: “During more normal circumstances, we expect between 40,000 and 50,000 companies to trigger one of our negative health markers. Today- even with many Government support measures still in place – we are seeing roughly three times that amount: 135,000.
Rouse said that even these higher figures represented “the calm before the storm” as “significant amounts of business distress” would be felt once the Government withdrew its coronavirus financial support.
London accounts for just over a quarter of businesses in distress (25.58 per cent) followed by businesses more generally in the South East outside the M25 (18.44 per cent).
>See

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