BUSINESS TAKES ACTION TO CUT COSTS AND MAINTAIN CASHFLOW AS FEAR OF RECESSION TAKES HOLD
8th September 2008
UK businesses are taking action to cut costs and preserve cashflow as the fear of a serious downturn takes hold, according to a survey of 500 small and medium-sized businesses by chartered accountants and business advisers MacIntyre Hudson. The research found that 84 per cent believe that there has been a significant deterioration in the overall economic climate for businesses in the last 12 months. Over half (55 per cent) report that trading conditions in their own business have become more difficult since last year, while 83 per cent are anxious as to how business conditions will develop over the next year.
In the face of these fears, businesses are already taking action, focussing on controlling and where possible reducing costs, and maintaining cashflow within the business. Three quarters (75 per cent) are imposing stricter control of operational expenditure, while 44 per cent have reduced their capital expenditure. 30 per cent are already reducing the number of staff they employ. The importance of cashflow has also been recognised, with 47 per cent tightening credit control for existing customers and 44 per cent conducting stricter credit assessments for new clients.
While the research found a majority of businesses are experiencing the
downturn directly, a substantially larger majority are more generally
concerned about economic prospects, with 78 per cent stating that media
coverage of the downturn and the worsening outlook for the economy has
influenced their expectations.
The research found that businesses with borrowings are feeling most exposed to the downturn, with 89 per cent of them reporting a significant deterioration in business conditions and 63 per cent stating that trading in their own business has become more difficult. 63 per cent of indebted businesses have found both that the interest rate at which banks will lend to them has increased in the last six months, and that the terms of lending have become stricter. They are also cutting costs at a greater rate than firms without debt, with 81 per cent imposing stricter expenditure controls and 40 per cent reducing headcount.