The IoD is urging the Chancellor to put entrepreneurs at the
heart of the recovery, and avoid damaging tax hikes, in its
Budget
submission published on Wednesday.
As well as calling for an extension of measures to deal with the
ongoing economic impact of Covid-19, the Institute called for a
stimulus package to unleash investment in start-ups and scale-ups
through targeted reliefs. In the year of COP26 the Institute is
also urging help for SMEs to play their part by setting up a new
Digital & Green Recovery Credit, to accelerate their
investment in technology and carbon reduction.
The submission calls on the
Government to provide a grant package to the millions of
owner-directors who have been without significant financial
support for almost a year. Alongside a temporary relief for
employers’ National Insurance Contributions, as an option to ease
business costs, the IoD called on the Treasury to help
entrepreneurs drive the recovery by not raising Corporation and
Capital Gains taxes, as some reports suggest.
To help businesses and the economy to adjust to the post-Brexit
landscape, the Institute pressed the Government to issue Brexit
adjustment vouchers for SMEs and significantly increase DIT’s
resource to help businesses make the most of trade agreements,
alongside reversing the decision to scrap duty-free shopping for
visitors to the UK. The IoD also urged the Government to put
‘levelling up’ into action, by accelerating the roll-out of
faster broadband, investing in R&D, and incentivising
retraining.
Jonathan Geldart, Director General at the Institute of
Directors, said:
“Entrepreneurs need to be at the front and centre of the
Government’s recovery plans. Businesses will be creating the jobs
and driving the innovation that the economy needs to rebuild—and
this Budget must support them.
“With battered balance sheets and ongoing restrictions, it is
paramount the existing package of grants, loans, and reliefs are
extended. A cliff-edge in support would be disastrous for
business. Also, it is high time the millions who have not
qualified for significant income support, like owner directors,
are given some reprieve.
“Now is also not the time to be experimenting with higher taxes.
Tax hikes right now risk choking off the economic recovery before
it has even got started. Instead, the Budget should put a shot in
the arm of entrepreneurs by providing reliefs to drive-up
investment in enterprising businesses and encouraging small firms
to invest in technology, retraining, and green growth. Slashing
the burden of business rates and employers’ NICs will also help
create the margins for firms to hire and rescale.
“After years of uncertainty and short-termism, the Chancellor
must use this Budget to set out a long-term vision for our
economy. SMEs should be supported as they adjust to the
post-Brexit landscape and seek out new trading opportunities.
Meanwhile, upgrades to roads, rail, and broadband must be
accelerated, and we must do more to leverage our world-class
universities to level-up growth across the country. Indeed, this
Budget must pave the way for small and middle market businesses
to be the driving force of our recovery."
Further detail on the IoD’s Budget
recommendations:
-
Extend the existing Covid-19 economic support
measures as long as restrictions continue, and provide a
one-off grant package for owner directors who have missed out
on support.
-
Put off major tax increases, while introducing a
temporary employers' NIC contributions cut and targeted
business rates relief for the most affected sectors and for
firms improving or expanding their premises.
-
Boost funding for scale-ups and start-ups by easing
restrictions on the Government’s Seed Enterprise Investment
Scheme and Enterprise Investment Scheme, doubling the maximum
company investment threshold on the former.
-
Encourage wider investment by creating a new
temporary Digital & Green Recovery Credit, to support
spending in technology (e.g. software, data and IT), carbon
reduction, and retraining, and extending the £1million Annual
Investment Allowance cap beyond the end of 2021
-
Broaden the scope of courses under the
Apprenticeship Levy, expand digital, management, and leadership
training opportunities, and suspend the Immigration Skills
Charge for small businesses
-
Deliver more targeted financial assistance for
Brexit adjustment, either by making such activity
tax-deductible for SMEs, or by introducing a voucher
scheme.
-
Reverse the decision to scrap duty-free shopping
for tourists and visitors to the UK
-
Significantly increase DIT’s resource to help
businesses make better use of existing and future trade
agreements
-
Invest in accelerating the rollout of faster
broadband, develop regional business support hubs, and
encourage stronger links between universities and local
businesses.
For full details, read
the IoD’s Budget 2021
Representation