Thursday 23 April 2009

Budget and SMEs

As the dust begins to settle on yesterday's Budget and various headlines seek to portray the event in a way that appeals (or gleefully horrifies) their readership, I'm struck by a glaring omission. Whether the budget was an "attack on the rich", the "death knell of a dying government", "a class war divide" or a "trap for the Tories" it doesn't appear to have been much help for SMEs.  True, most SME owners fall well below the £150k threshold for the 50% tax rate or the restrictions on pension tax relief but that's not much to sing about. I suspect that the strategic investment fund for struggling businesses will be eaten up by big biz (who represent 1% of businesses in the UK) and will involve huge amounts of red tape which SMEs have no capacity for. Maybe some of the support for the unemployed will help us employ people we wouldn't otherwise be able to afford, but I'm not hopeful and suspect the potential accusations of exploiting cheap labour (which may be true in some cases) will stifle the scheme as it has in the past. So we carry on as before. We carry on employing 50% of the UK work force. We carry on being the "engine of growth". And we carry on taking the real risks in this economy, without a safety net, and hope in vein that someone notices how important yet unheard we are. 

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