Local corporates have offered resounding support for this year's
Budget, with 88% stating that the business-related measures
outlined by the Chancellor will have a positive impact on private
sector growth while 72% of respondents believe the Government now
offers a clear plan around generating this growth.
In a survey of senior executives of companies from across the
Midlands with turnover above £5 million across the UK, the
findings also revealed 58% of corporates believe the Budget will
make the UK more competitive internationally.
The Barclays Corporate 2011 Post-Budget Survey offers further
good news for the Coalition, with a near unanimous 93% of local
business leaders stating the content of the Budget means the UK
will be a more favourable place to do business over the long term,
although this was less emphatic in the short term, with 60% stating
that the Budget would provide a better environment for businesses
immediately.
Ray O'Donoghue, Managing Director, Barclays Corporate in the
Midlands, said the results married with the many conversations he
was having with companies across the region:
"While some of the measures outlined in the Budget such as the
accelerated reduction in corporation tax will have a real and
almost immediate impact on companies, the most important aspect of
this Budget is the positive signals it sends to a corporate sector
which has been seeking both stability and reassurance from
Government around its underlying stance towards business."
Companies are quite willing to take some pain in the short term
to bring the deficit down, with 84% of the senior executives
surveyed stating the Government should stay the course with planned
spending cuts. The number of businesses for and against the need
for the 50p tax rate today is split almost 50/50 amongst
corporates, although 74% of respondents believe this tax rate will
be harmful to the economy over the long term.
However, Midlands corporates are also sceptical about whether
businesses themselves are doing enough to fuel growth, with the
majority (51%) stating that UK companies are not investing enough
to support economic recovery. And over three quarters of
respondents said the Budget had not motivated them to invest in
their businesses.
Ray O'Donoghue continued:
"Business investment is going to be one of the key factors in
how much economic growth we can achieve this year. If businesses
collectively gain the confidence to invest a little more readily as
Budget measures start to positively impact on individual operations
then George Osborne really has achieved something meaningful."
Looking ahead, when asked if the Coalition Government had a
clear long term vision for the economy, 70% of corporates attending
the event believe that they do, but that they are still not
communicating this vision clearly enough.