UK business confidence in crisis, new report says 

More than three quarters of bosses have low confidence in the UK business environment, according to a survey by the Adam Smith Institute (ASI) think tank. 

The ASI Business Confidence Survey took the temperature of 192 business leaders, who between them represent 100,000 employees – from sectors including finance, retail and manufacturing. 

It paints a “stark picture” of the private sector, with just 3.8% of the respondents having ‘high or very high confidence’ in the UK as a place to do business. 

When asked to give a ‘Business Confidence Score’, ranked from 1 to 10, the average score was just 2.6. 

Levels of taxation was the leading issue for businesses, with 75% stating that high business rates were a major concern to their organisation. 

Taxes on outputs, such as VAT and duties on goods, was a concern for 59% of those surveyed. 

Sam Bidwell, the ASI’s director of research, said of the data: “The Government has said that growth is their number one mission – but it’s impossible to achieve this without a booming private sector. 

“It is the business owners and the entrepreneurs who create wealth and prosperity, not bureaucrats in Whitehall.”

Red tape concerns

49% of those surveyed expressed concerns about the impacts of government regulation – as the ministers prepare to put a major package of employment legislation before the Commons.  

On Monday, a separate poll revealed that bosses feared the government’s upcoming workers’ rights legislation more than the National Insurance hike. 

Andrew Griffith, the Shadow Business Secretary, said that the data “[comes] as no surprise to anyone who actually understands how business works.”

“Fresh from a summer of trash-talking the economy and driving down consumer and business confidence, the Government’s Budget of Broken Promises is now taxing and regulating business into oblivion.”

‘Lawfare’ is also a significant worry for a number of businesses, with the ASI reporting on the threat of the UK’s class-action boom on private sector investment. 

Griffith added: “It’s not too late for Rachel Reeves to admit her mistake and backtrack on her damaging NICs hike and shelve the anti-growth Employment Rights Bill before more businesses are driven to the wall.”

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