SME’s are targeting
growth in UK markets over the next 12-months, rather than international trade,
according to new research from Novuna Business Finance.
The nationally
representative survey of 1,000 UK small businesses asked business owners which,
if any, countries offered them potential for trade and business growth over the
next year. Tracking the annual results over the last eight years, since 2017: -
· The percentage of UK small businesses looking to
open up new markets and growth opportunities within the UK has risen sharply
from 64% in 2017 to a record high of 84% this year. The sectors where small
businesses say they are most reliant on the UK market to secure future growth
were agriculture (97%), construction (96%) and hospitality (87%).
· Interest in expanding into the USA, stable
for five years at 16% has fallen back to 12% this year – an eight year low, and
well below its 22% peak at the start of 2020.
· The EU was for many years a significant
growth market for UK small businesses – but this has also fallen significantly
from 24% in 2017 to just 17% this year. Small businesses in the manufacturing
sector were the exception – here 24% of enterprises were looking to find ways
to do more trade with the EU market.
· Interest in doing business in European
countries outside the EU has halved over the same time period – down from 12%
to 6%.
Nationally, there
are no overseas countries that have seen a rise in the percentage of UK small
businesses that are looking to expand and secure growth opportunities. The
regions where small businesses were most reliant on the domestic UK market for
growth comprised of: Yorkshire and Humberside (92%), the West Midlands (92%)
and the North East (86%).
London was the exception
to the rest of the UK. The Capital had the lowest percentage of small
businesses (77%) relying on the UK market for trade. London small businesses
were also the most likely in the UK looking to open up growth opportunities in
the USA (31%) and the EU (25%).
Scotland emerged as an
enigma: Despite widely held pro-devolution and pro-European sentiments, 85% of
Scottish small businesses were looking to secure growth in the domestic UK
market – and they were below the national average when it came to looking for
growth opportunities in the EU market (15%).
Jo Morris, Head of Insight at Novuna Business Finance: “These new findings are possibly a consequence of the frustrations many small businesses have felt, following major political shifts over the last eight years. Our research in June 2017 revealed dismay over Brexit, with nearly a third of small business owners (31%) saying they wanted a new government that would reverse the Brexit decision. Forward wind to the start of 2025 and our Business Barometer survey revealed that more than seven in 10 small businesses (77%) said they were fearful that policies from the new US administration could have an adverse ripple effect on the outlook for small businesses here in the UK. Our new findings see this playing out, with a growing number of small businesses looking to the local UK market to deliver their aspirations for growth and expansion.”
“In recent months, the
UK government has heralded a string of so-called ‘historic’ trade deals with
India, the United States, and the European Union. Our data questions whether
this will deliver an uplift in confidence for UK small businesses, at a time when
their growth forecasts are falling each quarter. Small businesses dislike
uncertainty, and with the Autumn Budget approaching, many enterprises will be
hoping for a Budget that is good for business.”