Wednesday, 6 July 2011

Weekly Blog by Philip King, CEO of the ICM - 'Can we influence?'



Last week I mentioned the petition the ICM has launched urging the government to rethink its plans to exempt micro-businesses from filing accounts. Although broadly welcomed with the number of signatories growing by the day, there have been a few dissenting voices on our LinkedIn discussion group (http://linkd.in/ozIELu). One said that we have no chance of impacting the decision because it is an EU Directive; another that it should be a matter of choice for the micro-business determined by their appetite for credit. If they want credit, then they should file accounts and if they don't there is no need for them to do so.

On the first question, this is only a proposal at present and would require ratification before it could proceed and allow Member States to implement locally. More importantly, from what I hear, several countries are resisting it (notably France, Italy and Belgium) while Germany and the UK seem to be the main champions for change. Influencing the UK's stance is therefore a worthwhile exercise, hence the petition. I believe we can influence the thinking of politicians and therefore the progress of the proposal.

As regards the argument that micro-businesses have a choice, I concede there may be many small businesses that do not seek credit and may well never offer credit either; for them, this might save a bit of hassle. But they still need to produce accounts for tax purposes and if they ever want bank facilities, then accounts will be required. Similarly if they tender for a contract with a public sector body (or a large private sector organisation) financial information on the business will be sought, and they need to know how the business is doing and whether it is solvent and profitable. It is true that you can do all of this without filing accounts at Companies House but making financial information a matter of public record has always been the price of limited liability (limiting your personal liability to your £2 issued capital can be very attractive) and online filing means the filing process is getting easier and easier.

Perhaps just as importantly, the filing of accounts allows credit reference agencies to report on small limited companies and many checks are carried out on potential suppliers, customers, and partners that might lead to a lucrative business relationship of one form or another, sometimes without the subject company even knowing. Credit professionals have bemoaned the absence of information on sole traders and partnerships for all of my 33 years in the industry and we're in danger of putting micro-businesses into the same category. Is this proposal going to drive economic growth or stifle it? I know which camp I'm in and - if you agree - then I urge you to sign the petition here: http://t.co/WEZbqw6

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