Intelligent SME.tech Issue 61 | Page 32

// INTELLIGENT TECHNOLOGY //

British small businesses grapple with financial skills crisis, hindering growth and economic stability

A critical financial skills gap is undermining the resilience and growth of small businesses across the UK, according to new research published by Xero, a global small business platform.

The study, conducted by Opinium, exposes a widespread lack of financial confidence among entrepreneurs leading to mistakes and missed opportunities, with significant implications for individual businesses and the broader economy.
Despite only a quarter( 24 %) of small business owners believing they lack necessary financial skills, the research indicates a deeper problem.
Nearly two in five( 38 %) are unaware if their business was profitable last month, and over half( 55 %) struggle with cash flow management.
This uncertainty often leads to active avoidance: more than one in four( 28 %) business owners don’ t think of themselves as‘ a numbers person’ – a figure that rises to 32 % among female respondents and 38 % for 18-34-year-old entrepreneurs. Alarmingly, more than half( 55 %) avoid finances, and one in five( 22 %) are too afraid to ask financial questions, fearing they should already know the answers.
Pub‘ misinformation’
Nearly half of accountants and bookkeepers( 45 %) blame ill-informed conversations in places like the pub for the spread of financial misinformation. They fear this means small businesses are making avoidable financial mistakes, with regulations relating to expenses being widely misunderstood.
• Half( 50 %) of accountants and bookkeepers have worked with small businesses who incorrectly assume the government will reimburse their expenses
• A third( 33 %) of accountants and bookkeepers have met business owners who didn’ t realise dividends were taxable
• One in ten( 9 %) of the smallest businesses( up to 9 employees) incorrectly believe that they don’ t need to declare all their income to tax authorities
For small businesses, accountants and bookkeepers are a hugely trusted source. Nearly all small businesses( 98 %) who have consulted them found the advice helpful.
The skills gap is creating unknown mistakes, at scale
This cultural resistance is fostering detrimental financial habits, including:
• Two in five( 39 %) small businesses failing to claim all eligible expenses, and over half( 51 %) are caught off guard by unexpected costs
• A quarter( 26 %) not setting aside enough money for tax or submitting a late tax or VAT return
• More than half of sole traders( 59 %) operate without a separate business bank account
• Half( 51 %) wrongly believe HMRC will contact them if a tax return is due
• A quarter( 26 %) of small businesses mistakenly believe that business purchases are exempt from tax
Kate Hayward, UK Managing Director at Xero, said:“ We are a nation of small business owners, but we are not a nation who trains our children to think and behave like entrepreneurs. Culturally, there’ s a stigma around not knowing our numbers, with many I speak to worried that they should know more than they do. There’ s no shame in it when nobody is teaching us about it, but businesses deserve more. So today we’ re launching our own free programme to help, but we are calling for further support from government and industry.” �
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