Monthly Archives: July 2021

Calls to extend complex Brexit Support Fund

By Anna Jordan on Small Business – Advice and Ideas for UK Small Businesses and SMEs

The £20m Brexit Support Fund to support struggling businesses after Brexit has only given out £6.8m of its allocated funding.

Individuals and organisations are calling for the fund, now closed to new applications, to extend to a second round.

Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove launched the Brexit Support Fund in February, encouraging businesses that trade with the EU to claim up to £2,000 each to help pay for training and professional advice. However, figures show that businesses who applied only received £1,555 rather than the £2,000 maximum.

Hilary Benn MP, co-chair of the cross-party UK Business and Trade Commission, said the support scheme was “more of an obstacle course, which discourages applications by making SMEs jump through too many hoops for a very small return”.  

Businesses were only able to apply if their overseas trading was purely focused on the EU, including Northern Ireland, with their imports and exports not going anywhere else. Business groups did lobby to have the rules relaxed so that firms that were predominantly trading with the EU could apply.

>See also: Top five tips for SME exporters in a post-Brexit world

HMRC, who

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Over half of SMEs have already bounced back from the pandemic

By Anna Jordan on Small Business – Advice and Ideas for UK Small Businesses and SMEs

More than half (54 per cent) of UK SMEs have already met or exceeded pandemic turnover levels.

One in five (22 per cent) have already exceeded pre-Covid levels while 31 per cent predict they’ll match pre-Covid figures soon. Only one in seven still deem their path to recovery ‘uncertain’.

The study from Paragon Bank also shows that nine in ten businesses feel positive about Covid recovery. This positive sentiment is especially high among SMEs, up from 86 per cent in September to 92 per cent at the end of May.

Companies with fewer than 100 employees expected the fastest rate of recovery, with 64 per cent reporting turnover matching or exceeding pre-pandemic levels, compared to 47 per cent of larger SMEs (100-249 employees).

The survey revealed that 58 per cent of SMEs experienced cash flow difficulties during the pandemic, making it the most common challenge for UK businesses. Loss of profit was the second most common challenge, faced by 53 per cent of SMEs, followed by late payments, which affected one in three (34 per cent).

>See also: How to deal with late payment

Levels of cash reserve remain a

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