Manchester firms are not happy with the level of local business support they are receiving from government, it was announced today. The research, conducted by YouGov, found that 66% of Manchester SMEs polled do not feel there has been enough local support. It also highlighted that many local SMEs are still experiencing financial difficulties with 85% seeing the UK as not out of the recession yet, despite official figures otherwise.
Before next week's emergency budget, Manchester firms polled are firmly in opposition to the planned hike in national insurance. When asked what one thing they would like to see from the new coalition government, 42% of SMEs wanted to see the rise in national insurance scrapped. A further 20% were desperate for tax payments to continue to be delayed through extending the government's business payment support service.
The research polled 74 small businesses in Manchester that are using invoice finance for their corporate funding and was commissioned by the Asset Based Finance Association. Local firms were stark in their criticism of the old Labour government with 76% of firms believing that the Labour government had not done enough to help businesses during the credit crunch. Only 12% of firms thought that Labour had done as much as they could to help.
Access to finance for Manchester SMEs is still a critical issue, with 66% responding that their funding environment is either very hard or relatively hard, with only 1% seeing access to finance as being very easy.
This latest YouGov research of firms using invoice finance comes just days before the coalition Government is due to announce the abolition of many Regional Development Agencies. The results come ahead of next week's emergency budget announcement in which more spending cuts are expected to be made.
Kate Sharp, chief executive of the Asset Based Finance Association, said: "For
firms in Manchester it's clear that access to finance is still really important.
While our members are actively lending to Manchester SMEs, it will be critical
that the emergency budget looks to help them more, by extending government initiatives
such as the Enterprise Finance Guarantee scheme. And with 66% of firms feeling
that they haven't received enough local support, scrapping regional development
agencies might not prove popular with many small firms too. It would seem that
there is still some way to go before restoring business confidence in Manchester."