The FPB is urging the Government to step up its efforts to reduce the burden of regulation on small businesses, following new research showing that red tape costs the UK’s smaller business employers almost £12 billion per year.
According to the FPB’s latest Referendum survey on the ‘cost of compliance’, small business employers devote an average of 37 hours each month to complying with regulations. The FPB believes that reducing the time and cost of complying with legislation must not be sidelined, particularly as many firms are struggling to survive because of the recession.
The FPB’s Policy Representative, Matt Goodman, will attend a meeting of the Better Regulation Executive (BRE) today. The meeting follows reports that the Government is not pushing through plans to reduce regulation following its scrapping of ‘regulatory budgets’ that had been earmarked for individual departments.
In addition, two committees on regulation announced by Peter Mandelson in April, the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS), have still not been set up. Further, in a recent blog on its website, and ahead of the publication of the Treasury’s forthcoming consultation on regulating lenders, the BRE said that ‘financial services [are] at the forefront of our issues now’.
“As part of a new department with a broader remit, the BRE must continue to put the smallest businesses at the forefront of its plans to change the culture of bureaucracy in the UK,” said Mr Goodman. “Our research shows that complying with red tape remains one of the major cost burdens facing smaller businesses, swallowing up valuable time and money that could be used more profitably elsewhere.”
He added: “In addition, at a time when protecting both workers and businesses should be a priority, regulations are increasingly burdensome as businesses take on more staff.”









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