Government could be doing more to ensure that its activities to
support businesses are aligned and well-co-ordinated, according to
the National Audit Office (NAO).
The NAO has published two reports today. The
first, Business support schemes, looks at the
management of the support government, particularly the Department
for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS), provides to
businesses. The second, British Business Bank,
examines the impact of the British Business Bank on small-medium
enterprises’ (SMEs) access to finance and its preparedness to
respond to future challenges.
The NAO’s work has found that the support government
provides to business is fragmented between different departments
and often lacks overall co-ordination and prioritisation, which
both BEIS and HM Treasury recognise needs to be
improved.
The British Business Bank was set up by BEIS to help
make access to finance interventions more coherent and it has had
some success in this area. However, while it has an objective to
act as a centre of expertise for providing advice and support to
public bodies, it is not "the default" operator of government
interventions. The report on the Bank says BEIS and HM Treasury
should consider whether their statement in 2014 that the Bank
would operate all national SME access to finance schemes across
government still holds.
The NAO’s analysis of 10 schemes run by BEIS found
that not enough was being done to understand which schemes are
most helpful to businesses. Six out of the 10 schemes lacked
measurable objectives and only one had a thorough evaluation of
the scheme’s impact, making it difficult for BEIS to know which
to continue with and which to stop. The report finds there are
signs that BEIS is improving the set up and management of new
schemes, but it is too soon to tell whether they have had an
impact.
The British Business Bank, on the other hand, had
clear performance metrics and carried out evaluation of its
impact on SMEs. Overall, it has been performing well and SMEs
have been growing as a result of its activities. However, the NAO
says that this analysis will need to be ongoing as the value of
many of the Bank’s interventions will only be known in the
long-term and there is currently limited information on the
cost-effectiveness of its activities.
Changes in the external environment could have an
impact on the role and work of business support schemes and the
British Business Bank in the future. With the UK leaving the EU,
government may want to replace the support that businesses
receive from the EU with its own initiatives – a task that will
be made harder if central co-ordination of schemes is not
improved. Several EU institutions also provide access to finance
for SMEs in the UK, and the Bank may be best placed to take on
some of these roles.
The Bank has considered how it might help SMEs in an
economic downturn through increasing the availability of its
products. However, while it could make some products available
within weeks, it might be more than a year before businesses
could access others. It is also unclear how the Bank's
contribution would fit within BEIS’s wider response to a
downturn.
In the Business support
schemes report, the NAO recommends that BEIS coordinate
a review of its schemes to determine their strategic fit with the
Industrial Strategy and changes required as a result.
In British Business Bank, the NAO calls for
government to set out more clearly what it wants the Bank to
achieve as part of government's wider support to
business.
, the head of the NAO, said today:
“Government understands the importance of
better co-ordination and coherence across the schemes it provides
to business, but it still has some way to go before all the dots
are joined up. More thorough evaluation of which schemes work
best will help government plan and prioritise its support going
forward.”
“The British Business Bank has performed well
against its objectives. Government now needs to think carefully
about the role it wants the Bank to play in the future,
particularly after the UK leaves the European
Union.”