sole trader
Life sciences sector based approach Micro
economic pressure
Tourism Advanced materials and manufacturing differing needs
Energy and environment Small
SME welsh economy ICT
Support
medium
FOOD
Small Businesses in Priority Sectors federation of small businesses wales
economic renewal plan (ERP)
Financial and professional services e-commerce
Large
Creative industries
Construction
Wales’ Leading Business Organisation Mudiad Busnes Blaenllaw Cymru
2
Small Businesses in Priority Sectors
table of contents 3
Executive Summary
4
Introduction to the Economic Renewal Programme (ERP) in Wales
5
A Sectoral Approach to Economic Development
6
Small Firms in Wales
10
Outline of Method
10
Survey Respondent Characteristics
13
Trade Patterns
14
Business Performance
16
Methods of Financing
17
Challenges Facing Business
19
Conclusions: ERP and Small Firms
3
Cardiff Business School and Federation of Small Businesses Wales
1. Executive summary 1.1 T he Welsh Economy has grown slowly in recent years. Continuing global economic pressures have meant that the competitiveness of Welsh firms has been below that of other regions of Europe. In 2010, the Welsh Government published the Economic Renewal Plan (ERP). This set out a roadmap to develop the conditions and frameworks to enable the private sector to grow. One of the primary differences between this and previous plans was the targeted nature of all support. A sector based approach was identified whereby business support polices were constructed based on the needs of individual sectors. 1.2 I t is critical that the industrial structure of Wales is considered when it comes to implementing the ERP. While large firms dominate Welsh employment, sole traders, micro and small firms vastly outnumber them. We expect the needs of small firms to be different from larger ones. Caution is therefore required if policy takes a “one size fits all� approach. 1.3 T his report finds differences in business needs by sector and size. A finer graining of policies could therefore be important for industrial development policy. We argue that a sector approach needs to be balanced with an understanding of how intra-sectoral needs vary by firm size. If used as the road map for future development, the ERP needs to have a greater emphasis on SMEs. There needs to be greater support for non-financial issues such as trading abroad and improving e-commerce.
Key Findings
It was found that the vast majority of SMEs are unaware of whether their firm fits into a priority sector. It is also clear that a significant number of firms which did not put themselves in a priority sector could indeed be in one.
It was found that the majority of respondents indicated that the operational activities of SMEs were being funded through highly costly means including credit cards and overdrafts. This was a common finding across all sectors.
It was found that SMEs lacked awareness of the financial funds available to them. For example, less than 10% of respondents were aware of the Finance Wales JEREMIE fund.
10%
It was found that the operational business support sought by firms was highly generic with little sector specific patterns. Receiving marketing support was deemed as the area of most need across all sectors. It was found that the financial concerns for SMEs were generic with little sectoral variation. The level of business rates is one of the most pressing concerns for SMEs surveyed.
4
Small Businesses in Priority Sectors
2. Introduction to the Economic Renewal Programme (ERP) in Wales 2.1 T his report has the following objectives. First, to examine the rationale for a regional economic policy that focuses on the prioritisation of key sectors. Second, to examine the developmental needs of SMEs operating in Wales, particularly examining specific factors affecting SME progress in sectors that have been prioritised within the Welsh Government Economic Renewal Programme (ERP). This includes the following sectors:
FOOD ICT Energy and environment Advanced materials and manufacturing Creative industries Life sciences Financial and professional services Tourism Construction 2.2 T he ERP was launched in 2010 with the goal of re-energising the Welsh economy. This flagship Welsh Government policy has been lauded within political circles but with rather less economic critique. Our report first examines key sector policy in order to better understand the rationale and underlying objective. In doing so the report highlights some issues. One of the objectives of the ERP is to heighten entrepreneurship, small business development and endogenous economic growth. We believe that this can only be achieved if the needs of small firms are fully understood, particularly those operating in defined priority sectors.
2.3 T his research is based around the basic principle that policy initiatives focusing on priority sectors need to be based on reliable information about the needs of businesses in the same sectors, particularly smaller firms. In particular, we show that small firms make up an important element of firm stock and employment base within sectors prioritised by Welsh Government. Understanding the needs and challenges facing these firms could be an important determinant of the success or failure of strategic policy. The report findings draw on existing quantitative data, but also a new survey of the FSB Wales membership. The survey’s objective was to better understand the current challenges affecting small firms in Wales. Survey themes included access to finance and views on current market conditions. The survey also examined specific sector conditions and core competencies among FSB members in priority strategic sectors. The survey sought to identify both the operational and strategic concerns that small firms in priority sectors were facing. 2.4 I n what follows we first provide some background to regional economic strategies that have focused on the prioritisation of sectors. Second, we provide some analysis on the small firm sector in Wales, showing the level of small firm economic activity within priority sectors. Third, we outline the method and survey instrument used to derive information on the current conditions facing SMEs in Wales, with a focus on activity within priority sectors. The fourth and following sections report the main findings from the survey. The final section concludes with some recommendations for policy development.
5
Cardiff Business School and Federation of Small Businesses Wales
3. A Sectoral Approach to Economic Development 3.1 A common theme in contemporary regional strategies is the identification of sets of key sectors, or clusters, of inter-related industrial activity. These are assumed to be critical drivers of regional competitiveness. UK Government White Papers on competitiveness during the 1990s (see DTI, 1998) were influenced by Thurow (1992) and Porter (1990). Importantly, this work found that new growth industries depended on ‘brain power’ of staff rather than raw materials. UK government strategy therefore considered the opportunities for growth offered by ‘knowledge industries’ (House of Commons Library, 2000). Developed knowledge-growth principles generated a drive to support key sectors with growth properties and the need to explore clusters of ‘knowledge-based’ activity around distinct spatial nodes (DTI, 2001). These principles quickly filtered down to devolved Assembly initiatives in the UK. 3.2 B ryan et al. (2006) show that an examination of the resulting regional economic strategies revealed a remarkable consensus on policies to promote local development including clusters and key sectors. Bryan et al. (2006) concluded that there was emerging in the UK a widely held acceptance of the imperative for knowledge creation in key sectors and clusters, but that there was evidence to suggest that the source of this conviction was often anecdotal and heavily recycled, with a reliance on exemplar regions or localities usually outside the UK. A result was that economic strategies across the UK regions contained similar themes, and often encouraged the development of similar sectors and industry groups, with prioritisation of industries for special attention rarely subject to rigorous analysis, partly because of the absence of robust quantitative and qualitative analytical tools. One corollary was that a sectoral focus was seldom subjected to on-the-ground reality checks, or to any genuine evaluation of the risks.
3.3 Indeed research studies have concluded that many sector based/ cluster based policies have actually failed (see Boschma, 2004 and Cooke, 2007) due to incomplete knowledge about a sector’s operations resulting in the pure imitation of other regions. There is increasing awareness that ‘one- size-fits-all’ regional policy models do not work, as the generic nature of this strategy ignores other spatial phenomenon (Todtling and Trippl, 2005). Another reason for caution in picking priority sectors is found in the work of Boschma (2005) who questions policy inadequacies when it comes to industrial policies, particularly around how regions diversify into new growth paths. This work noted that public policy has limited capacity to help in this process. International evidence on targeting sectors would recommend caution. The work of Pessoa (2008) talks of “picking winners” when it comes to sector clusters. The evidence from this research hints at a stronger role for laissez-faire as opposed to intervention to select ‘winners’. 3.4 T here is also conflict within the academic literature over the rationale for picking priority sectors such as those set out in the ERP. The Welsh Government talks of “innovation” being key to driving success, yet Robertson and Langlois (1995) and Levinthal (1998) note that to innovate there is a need to leave behind “narrow sector perspectives”. These academic works argue that innovation is driven by interaction across the boundaries of sectors. The sectoral approach to regional development that has been implemented with the ERP is not a new phenomenon and throughout the operation of regional development agencies across the UK, some form of sectoral development was often initiated, but with questions on the success of interventions. 3.5 T he ERP therefore offers a reorientation of regional industrial policy to encourage more high growth firms. It is early days yet, but prior
evidence questions how far policies with a priority sector focus might be successful. One factor that could hinge success or failure of a priority sector approach is how it deals with sectoral differences in terms of need and how it deals with size heterogeneity among priority sector firms. 3.6 F or example, the ERP highlights as one of its 5 core priorities that: “We need to concentrate our resources where we can add the most value, acting as an enabler for the economy as a whole rather than a significant direct deliverer of services to individual businesses. We will develop a sectorbased, strategic approach to business support, developing our role as an expert facilitator and enabler.” 3.7 H owever, one thing not directly alluded to in the ERP is the distribution of firm sizes among the priority sectors, and whether support needs to be tailored to firms of very different size bands. It has been claimed that the ERP could lead to a possible depreciation of support to local businesses. 3.8 T here is significant academic evidence to suggest that the needs of small firms are considerably different than large firms regardless of sector (See for example, work by Westhead and Storey, 1996, Verhees and Meulenberg, 2004, Thorsten et al., 2008). Research has shown that two areas of persistent concern for small firms are access to finance and business support. Research does not argue against the targeting of business support. On the contrary work by Mason and Brown (2011) found after analysing policy in Scotland, that effective support needs to be targeted and delivered at a regional level. However this research revealed the importance of customization and that heterogeneity exists in firm needs and challenges. This is likely to be an equally relevant finding when priority growth sectors are considered.
6
Small Businesses in Priority Sectors
4. Small firms in Wales 4.1 T he focus of this section is to examine SME activity within the ERP priority sectors. We accept that there is some difficulty in matching priority sectors to standard industrial classifications. It is useful to reflect on the basic demography of firms in Wales in terms of size classes. Table 1 provides a headline analysis of firm size in Wales. This shows the very large numbers of small and micro firms in the business stock. In most sectors, micro firms employing up to 9 people make up the largest number.
4.2 D ata provided by the Welsh Government in 2009 show that there were 23,080 private sector enterprises active in Wales in a priority sector. This was 21% of all private sector enterprises. A total of 85,520 private sector enterprises were not in a priority sector. Table 2 gives the breakdown of firm sizes in priority sectors.
http://wales.gov.uk/docs/statistics/2011/110223economicrenewalen.pdf
1
Table 1. Firm Size by Sector (Wales 2009) (%) *Source: STATS WALES, 2011
Agriculture 99.2
0.7
0.1
0.0
PRODUCTION 86.1
8.3
3.5
CONSTRUCTION
2.2
97.7
1.8
0.3
0.2
WHOLESALE, RETAIL, TRANSPORT, HOTELS, FOOD & COMMUNICATION
PRIVATE SECTOR HEALTH AND EDUCATION
91.8
92.2
5.8
1.1
1.3
5.7
1.4
0.7
FINANCE AND BUSINESS SERVICES 95.4
2.9
0.8
0.8
OTHER SERVICES 96.8
2.3
key
0.6
0.4
Micro (0-9) Small (10-49) medium (50-249) Large (250+)
7
Cardiff Business School and Federation of Small Businesses Wales
4.3 T he table reveals that small firms and sole trader organisations represent over three quarters of 23,080 total firms in priority sectors. Therefore developments within these small firms and sole traders would be a critical determinant of the success or failure of policy linked to the ERP. This report acknowledges that in 2011/2012 the Welsh Government released new
definitions of priority sectors including a broader range of industries and thereby increasing the number of firms that could be included. The Government also notes an overlap between sectors in these definitions1.
% IN A PRIORITY SECTOR
Table 2. Employment Size Breakdown of Priority Sectors 2009 Source: Welsh Government, Statistics for Wales (2011)
21.2% 9,485
2,630
22.7%
725
24.4%
1,850
18.3% 19.0%
8,390 18.7%
23,080
IN A PRIORITY SECTOR
TOTALS
SIZE BAND keY
sole trader (0)
38,915
Micro (0-9)
44,245
Small (10-49)
9,875
medium (50-249)
3,955
Large (250+)
11,610
TOTAL 1
http://wales.gov.uk/topics/statistics/headlines/economy2012/121121/?lang=en
108,600
8
Small Businesses in Priority Sectors
4. Small firms in Wales Cont. 4.4 T able 3 shows the distribution of firm numbers by employment size classes for the ERP priority sectors. This reveals the differences in demography by sectors. For example, in Advance Materials and Manufacturing just over two thirds of firms are either sole traders or employ between 1-9 people. For most of the remaining sectors, over 80% are sole traders or micro businesses, reaching 98% in the case of Food and Farming.
Table 3. Distribution of firms by employment size bands in Priority Sectors: Wales 2011 Source: Welsh Government, Stats Wales (2012)
Size of Firms (%)
Zero (0) Micro (1-9) Small (10-49) Medium (50-249) Large (250+)
Total
Advanced materials manufacturing
26.8
40.7
18.3
8.9
5.2
Construction
38.2
52.3
7.2
1.4
0.8 12,135
Creative industries
55.0
37.4
5.1
1.4
1.4
Energy & environment
44.3
44.9
7.0
2.0
1.7 13,990
Food & Farming
74.7
23.4
1.3
0.3
0.3 14,035
Financial and professional services
46.6
42.4
7.0
2.0
2.0 13,475
ICT
56.0
36.0
4.9
1.5
1.5
2,975
Life sciences
29.1
38.0
14.8
11.1
7.4
270
Tourism
20.3
63.0
13.3
1.8
4.5 T able 4 provides a different slant by examining the distribution of employment within firms in different size bands in the priority sectors. For example in Advanced Materials and Manufacturing large firms employing more than 250 people made up nearly 61% of sector employment. The corollary is that while small firms made up most of the firm numbers in priority sectors their contribution in terms of total employment is smaller. However, Table 4 reveals strong contribution of firms in the sole traders, small and micro category in most priority sectors. For example in Construction, and Food and Farming sole traders or firms employing between 1-9 people made up 35% and 27% of total sector employment respectively.
2,590
2,565
1.5 10,010
4.6 C onsidering the proportion of turnover of firms of different size bands, Table 5, as expected, shows that large firms generate the largest proportion of sales in most cases. However, micro firms employing 1-9 generate at or over 20% of turnover in Construction, Creative Industries, Financial and Professional Services and Tourism. Sole traders only generate 3% of turnover across all sectors. Once again Table 5 reveals variations in the contribution of SMEs and sole traders to turnover in each priority sector.
9
Cardiff Business School and Federation of Small Businesses Wales
Table 4. Distribution of employment by firm within different size bands in Priority Sectors: Wales 2011 Source: Welsh Government, Stats Wales (2012)
Employment (%)
Zero (0) Micro (1-9) Small (10-49) Medium (50-249) Large (250+)
Total
Advanced materials manufacturing
0.5
4.6
11.4
22.9
60.7 85,280
Construction
3.6
31.8
26.5
19.0
19.1 60,905
Creative industries
5.6
22.2
16.0
11.2
45.0 12,835
Energy & environment
3.3
19.4
18.2
17.9
41.2 99,700
Food & Farming
0.7
26.7
11.6
13.4
47.7 29,240
Financial and professional services
3.5
15.4
13.9
14.4
52.8 119,875
ICT
6.3
14.6
11.5
16.6
51.1 22,565
Life sciences
0.8
4.3
9.0
86.0
Tourism
0.7
22.2
24.5
12.7
39.8 96,970
All industries
1.2
11.8
12.7
11.2
63.1 536,410
0.0
Table 5. Distribution of turnover by firm of different employment size bands in Priority Sectors: Wales 2011 Source: Welsh Government, Stats Wales (2012)
Employment (%)
Zero (0) Micro (1-9) Small (10-49) Medium (50-249) Large (250+)
Advanced materials manufacturing
0.6
1.3
3.3
10.6
84.2
Construction
6.9
23.8
20.8
18.8
29.8
Creative industries
9.9
26.0
16.2
10.8
37.0
Energy & environment
3.1
7.8
8.1
12.3
68.8
Food & Farming
10.1
18.0
7.2
10.1
54.5
Financial and professional services
11.9
22.2
16.7
20.1
29.1
ICT
2.1
4.4
4.6
10.4
78.5
Life sciences
0.4
2.2
5.9
91.6
0.0
Tourism
2.9
19.8
14.4
9.0
54.0
All industries
3.0
11.0
10.8
12.2
62.9
9,040
10
Small Businesses in Priority Sectors
5. outline of method
6. Survey Respondent Characteristics
5.1 A detailed survey was developed that sought to examine small business perceptions on the business environment, finance, trade, and business support. The questions were constructed to allow sector and firm size differences to be analysed.
6.1 F igures 1 reveals the spatial distribution of firms who responded to the survey. Nearly 40% of respondents were from South-East Wales, with 25% from South-West Wales. Less than 10% of survey respondents were from Mid-Wales.
5.2 T he survey was sent to 6,000 members of FSB Wales who have email access. The survey gained 625 responses over a 2 month period (August and September 2012). The distribution of the returns in terms of sectors was broadly in line with the FSB Wales membership as was the geographical distribution of the respondents.
Figure 1. Geographical Distribution of Results
5.3 T he survey comprised a combination of open and closed questions. The survey was designed to incorporate the self classification of firms into sectors. This process allows the identification of which sector firms believe they are in as well as questioning separately whether they are aware of being in a priority sector. The data collected has been analysed to identify the issues of most concern to SMEs in different priority sectors. The survey also allowed the analysis of the recent performance of SMEs in different priority sectors.
North Wales
29%
5.4 T he first section of the survey asked firms to identify which sector they believed they operated in, using the SIC framework. This was supplemented by asking firms to report whether they were in a priority sector or not. The next section dealt with the financial performance of the firm, this included questions on turnover and costs over the course of the last year’s trading. The final section sought to explore the areas of concern for the firm, examining the problems they had faced in the last year of trading as well as the general economic environment. Finally firms were questioned about the different types of business support they thought would benefit them.
MID Wales
8%
south EAST Wales South West wales
25%
38%
11
Cardiff Business School and Federation of Small Businesses Wales
6.2 F igure 2 shows the ownership structure of firms which responded to the survey. Nearly 45% of firms classified themselves as limited companies, with around one third being sole traders. The distribution described in Figure 2 reveals that the sample contains firms having limited and unlimited liability. This is potentially a factor in determining the nature of responses to questions on support needs.
6.3 F igure 3 shows how the sample was distributed between firms of different ages. Some 39% of the survey respondents were firms which had been in existence for in excess of 14 years. Around 7% of the respondents were new firms which had been in existence for less than one year. Once again we expect firms of different age profiles to respond differently to questions relating to business support. Many of the younger firms have come into existence during very testing economic conditions.
Figure 2. Ownership of Firms responding to the Survey
Figure 3. Age Distribution of Firms
0.3% 6.6%
1.4% 16.2%
Less than 1 year
32.6%
0.3%
12.3% 2-3 years
0.2%
25.2% 4-8 years
9-13 Years 16.8%
4.2% 44.7%
key
SOLE TRADER PRIVATE COMPANY LIMITED BY GUARANTEE LIMITED LP LLP GENERAL PARTNERSHIP
14 years + 39.1%
12
Small Businesses in Priority Sectors
6. Survey Respondent Characteristics Cont. 6.4 T able 6 displays how the main sectors respondents classified their businesses. Some 64% of the respondents believed that they were part of a sector prioritised in the ERP. This suggests there is a gap between the views of survey respondents and the official statistical definitions used by the Welsh Government, which would be an issue when taking a sector based policy forward.
Table 6. Breakdown by Priority Sector Sector
Responses (n=625)
Creative industries
49
(7.9%)
Information, Communication and Technology (ICT) 54
(8.7%)
Energy and Environment
12
(1.9%)
Advanced materials and manufacturing
19
(3.0%)
Life Sciences
7
(1.1%)
Financial and Professional services
63
(10.1%)
Food and Farming
32
(5.1%)
Construction
73
(11.7%)
Tourism
91
(14.6%)
None of the above
224
(35.9%)
6.5 T o explore the sector response component further those who did not identify themselves as being in a priority sector were asked to best describe the industry that they operate in. Over 210 responses were collected and the top 10 (based on percentage) are displayed in Figure 4. The data shows a large number of responses from those in agriculture based industries and food production as well as manufacturing, including Advanced Technologies. What is most interesting to note is that many of these responses could fit into one or more of the priority sectors. Our analysis suggested that a large number (an estimated two thirds) of those who did not self classify as being in a priority sector could actually be in one. This could be a concern if support were to be targeted on a sector basis with some potential beneficiaries of policy being excluded. This finding would also suggest that elements of the small business community struggle to understand the concept of priority sectors and thus could find it difficult to access government support.
Figure 4. Non-Priority Sectors Identified by Survey Respondents Crop and animal production 84 Forest and logging 59 fishing and aquaculture 32 mining and quarrying 28 manufacture of food 25 manufacture of beverages 17 manufacture of textiles 17 manufacture of apparel 16 manufacture of leather 15 manufacture of wood products 14
13
Cardiff Business School and Federation of Small Businesses Wales
7. Trade Patterns 7.1 T he ERP emphasises the importance of improving Welsh export performance. This is a key signal as to the competitiveness of sectors in terms of how far they prosper in both wider UK and international markets. The survey investigated the direction of trade of the FSB survey respondents. Table 7 reveals that for the sampled firms, the average sales generated within the region was 60% of total sales. However, there is wide variation. For example in Advanced Materials and Manufacturing just 14% of firm total sales were generated, on average, in Wales, and in Life Sciences 38% (albeit with a small number of responses here). However, responding firms in Food and Farming, and Energy and the Environment reported that Welsh sales made up over four-fifths of turnover. 7.2 T able 7 also shows the proportion of respondents who were engaged in exporting overseas. For all sectors (FSB respondents classifying themselves in Priority and Non Priority sectors) some 29% were engaged in overseas exporting. Once again there is strong variation among the respondents within Priority sectors. For example, around three quarters of respondents in Life Sciences were engaged in overseas exporting. However, FSB respondents in sectors such as Construction, Energy, Food and Farming, Financial and Professional Services and Tourism, less than 10% of the respondents in each case were engaged in overseas exporting. 7.3 F inally here existing support structures in Wales have sought to encourage SMEs to develop capacity to undertake on line sales. Clearly the scope for online sales varies according to sector. Around two-thirds of survey respondents reported that online sales were less than 10% of their total turnover. The survey findings (see Table 8) reveal that there was greater activity for online sales among FSB members in Creative Industries, ICT and Tourism.
Table 7. Percentage of total turnover generated from Wales (priority sector respondents and all sector averages). Percentage of firms in sectors engaged in exporting overseas
Sector All Sectors
% of Sales
% Involved in
generated in Wales
Exporting
60.2 28.7%
Construction
75.6
2.9%
Energy and Environment
80.7
0.0%
Creative industries
55.7
27.8%
Food and Farming
82.9
7.7%
Financial and Professional services
74.8
3.1%
Life Sciences
38.3
75.0%
ICT
45.6
36.7%
Advanced materials and manufacturing
14.0
42.9%
Tourism
51.7
1.8%
Less than 10%
Over 61 %
67.2%
10.4%
77.1%
2.9%
100.0%
0.0%
Creative industries
64.7%
23.5%
Food and Farming
91.7%
0.0%
Financial Services
86.7%
6.7%
ICT
80.0%
10.0%
Life Science
50.0%
0.0%
Advanced materials and manufacturing
85.7%
0.0%
Tourism
23.1%
23.1%
Table 8. Percentage of Sales generated online Sector All Sectors Construction Energy and Environment
14
Small Businesses in Priority Sectors
8. Business Performance 8.1 T he next section of the survey examined business performance and trends in costs. We explored whether there was evidence of ‘greenshoots’ in small firms in prioritised sectors. It is accepted here that firm financial years differ. The survey questions focused on changes to performance and costs experienced by respondents during the last financial year. The survey also sought to examine whether there were differences in performance and costs across respondents in priority sectors. 8.2 T able 9 reveals something of the difficult trading conditions facing businesses in Wales over the last year. For all respondents nearly half reported a decrease in turnover during the last financial year, with 36% reporting an increase. When exploring the data further, significant differences between sectors can be found. Caution on generalising from these findings is needed because of the small numbers of firms responding from selected Priority sectors. In Advanced Material and Manufacturing no respondents reported an increase in sales in the last financial year. However, in ICT 63% of respondents reported an increase in sales. In Tourism and Construction 72% and 61% of respondents reported a decrease in sales during the last financial year. Table 9 provides evidence of different prospects for FSB Wales members in Priority sectors coming out of the recession, but also hints at where higher levels of support might be needed in the short term. 8.3 T he next part of the survey focused on labour cost changes during the last year. There was expected to be a connection between increases in sales and increases in the main components of costs. For example Table 10 reveals that for all respondents 46% had an increase in labour costs set against the 36% of all sector respondents in Table 9 who reported a sales increase in the same period. It was not possible in the survey instrument to track how far labour cost increases aligned with an underlying increase in employment. However, the overall increases in labour costs sitting beside increases in sales reported in the previous table are possibly linked to underlying improvements in employment conditions across selected sectors.
Table 9. Sales Performance in the Last Year Turnover (%)
no change
decrease
increase
15.8
48.3
35.9
7.3
53.7
39.0
Creative Industries
36.4
27.3
36.4
Advanced Materials
50.0
50.0
0.0
Construction
17.4
60.9
21.7
Energy
50.0
12.5
37.5
Financial Services
20.0
45.0
35.0
Food
36.4
27.3
36.4
ICT
16.7
20.8
62.5
Life Sciences
57.1
28.6
14.3
Tourism
10.3
71.8
17.9
no change
decrease
increase
44.4
9.8
45.8
Outside Priority Sectors
35.9
10.3
53.8
Creative Industries
58.3
8.3
33.3
Advanced Materials
77.8
0.0
22.2
Construction
30.4
30.4
39.1
Energy
87.5
0.0
12.5
Financial Services
41.2
17.6
41.2
Food
50.0
0.0
50.0
ICT
50.0
0.0
50.0
Life Sciences
77.8
0.0
22.2
Tourism
22.6
9.7
67.7
All Sectors Outside Priority Sectors
Table 10. Labour Costs in the Last Year labour cost (%) All Sectors
8.4 T able 11 reports changes in business profits over the last year. Once again there is some correlation with findings on turnover change. Around 27% of respondents reported an increase in profits in the last year, with 55% reporting a decrease. Turning to respondents within the Priority sectors over 70% in Construction and Tourism reported a reduction in profits in the last year. However, there were stronger profit performances in ICT and Financial Services where 48% and 37% of respondents respectively reported an increase in profits in the last year. Moreover 18% of all survey respondents reported no change in profits in the last financial year. However, across the respondents in Priority sectors the proportion of respondents reporting no change was higher than 18% with the exception of Tourism.
15
Cardiff Business School and Federation of Small Businesses Wales
8.5 T he survey also tried to make a link between performance and respondent views on how far economic prospects in Wales had strengthened over the last year. The survey results are summarised in Table 12. Overall less than 10% of respondents across all sectors thought the Welsh Economy had improved with 57% believing it had not. There are some sectoral differences but only 3 sectors gave relatively strong positive responses, Creative Industries, Financial and Professional Services, and Advanced Material and Manufacturing. Contrary to this Energy and the Environment, and Life Science had no respondents agreeing that the economy had improved. 8.6 E xploring the future business direction of the sectors, respondents were asked about the areas where future investment was likely in the next 12 months, Table 13 displays the results. The most likely area of investment is in new machinery and equipment with the least likely being investment in new premises. There is again considerable variation between sectors in terms of training staff with 66.7% of respondents from Food and Farming suggesting that they would be investing in this area, to just 12% in Creative Industries. In terms of investment in new machinery and equipment approximately 38% of respondents reported investment intentions in the next year. This figure varied greatly with 57% of respondents in Advanced material to just a quarter of respondents in the priority sectors of Life Sciences and Energy.
Table 11. Changes to Profit in the Last Year profit (%)
no change
decrease
increase
All Sectors
18.0
55.4
26.6
Outside Priority Sectors
12.2
58.5
29.3
Creative Industries
45.5
45.5
9.1
Advanced Materials
50.0
40.0
10.0
Construction
18.5
70.4
11.1
Energy
50.0
30.0
20.0
Financial Services
26.3
36.8
36.8
Food
38.5
46.2
15.4
ICT
23.8
28.6
47.6
Life Sciences
62.5
25.0
12.5
Tourism
12.5
72.5
15.0
Table 12. There has been an Improvement in the Welsh Economy in the Last Year Sectors (%)
Agree
disagree
All Sectors
9.6
57.4
Construction
5.9
52.9
Energy and Environment
0.0
62.5
Creative industries
23.5
47.1
Food and Farming
6.7
60.0
23.3
43.3
Life Sciences
0.0
66.7
ICT
6.5
51.6
14.3
57.1
3.8
73.1
Financial and Professional services
Advanced materials and manufacturing Tourism
Table 13. Areas of Investment in the Next 12 Months (%) exisiting new equip/ hire new Training existing staff All Sectors
staff Machinery
move
staff premises
36.9
37.6
28.2
15.2
Construction
42.9
42.9
28.6
11.8
Energy and Environment
37.5
25.0
25.0
0.0
Creative industries
11.8
41.2
11.8
17.6
Food and Farming
66.7
53.3
40.0
13.3
Financial and Professional services
36.7
30.0
35.5
12.9
Life Sciences
50.0
25.0
75.0
50.0
ICT
41.9
45.2
38.7
25.8
Advanced materials and manufacturing
71.4
57.1
57.1
28.6
Tourism
21.8
29.6
10.9
3.8
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Small Businesses in Priority Sectors
9. Methods of Financing 9.1 T he issue of finance has been a major concern for SMEs in Wales and as such our survey examined the methods of financing used by firms. Firms were asked to indicate what their primary source of funding for day to day business activity was. Table 14 displays the results. The most common funding was obtained from bank overdrafts, credit lines or credit cards and overdrafts. Around 27% of respondents reported these as primary sources of funding. The least common source was a Welsh Government grant. Over one fifth of those who responded said retained earnings from the sale of assets was the primary source of funding. Looking across the sectors there are some variations, Life Sciences and ICT have both seen much larger numbers of firms accessing Welsh Government grants with 14.3% and 9.1% respectively of respondents indicating they have used this source of funding. Retained earnings, although common in other sectors was used by less than 10% of respondents in Energy and the Environment, Advanced Materials and Manufacturing and Tourism. This mix of funding sources across sectors suggests the financing options for firms in Wales is quite diverse but worryingly over a quarter of respondents are using unsecured sources of finance for day to day activity.
9.2 T able 14 displays the results when respondents were asked about the main mode of financing. The table reveals that over a third of respondents had no need for a loan. Given the current market this is an interesting finding and might be explained by a quarter of firms funding growth through retained earnings or sales. The most common method of financing across all sectors was bank overdrafts or credit cards, a worrying trend given the unsecured nature of these loans. The least common method was a Welsh Government grant or subsidised bank loans.
Table 14. Source of Finance for day today Operations (%)
Sector
retained grants or earnings or subsidised bank sale of assets loan
cards overdraft
Bank Loan
Trade credit
other loan
leasing or hire purchase
bank overdraft,
Welsh Gov grant
credit line or credit
All Sectors
21.5
3.2
2.5
26.6
8.8
19.2
6.3
11.9
Construction
18.8
5.9
0.0
29.4
0.0
29.4
11.8
17.6
9.1
0.0
0.0
45.5
0.0
27.3
0.0
18.2
Creative industries
36.4
4.5
0.0
31.8
0.0
18.2
4.5
4.5
Food and Farming
13.5
5.4
2.7
27.0
13.5
18.9
8.1
10.8
Financial and Professional services
13.0
0.0
0.0
34.8
15.2
15.2
8.7
13.0
Life Sciences
28.6
0.0
14.3
28.6
0.0
0.0
0.0
28.6
ICT
36.4
6.8
9.1
20.5
4.5
15.9
4.5
2.3
Advanced materials and manufacturing
5.9
5.9
0.0
29.4
0.0
29.4
11.8
17.6
Tourism
8.9
1.7
0.0
21.5
8.9
13.2
18.1
10.5
Energy and Environment
Table 15. Interest Charges in the Last Year Interest Charges (%) All Sectors Outside Priority Sectors Creative Industries Advanced Materials Construction Energy Financial Services Food ICT Life Sciences Tourism
no change
decrease
increase
44.3
6.1
49.5
47.9
2.7
49.3
63.6
0.0
36.4
66.8
0.0
33.3
27.3
6.1
66.7
77.8
11.1
11.2
50.0
0.0
50.0
50.0
0.0
50.0
41.2
11.6
47.4
100.0
0.0
0.0
17.1
9.4
73.7
9.3 T o further develop insight into the problems facing SMEs and access to finance, firms were asked what has happened to their interest payments on borrowings over the course of the last year. The results of this are displayed in Table 15. Nearly half of respondents across all sectors said that their charges had increased with only 6.1% seeing a decrease. In Construction and Tourism priority sectors 67% and 73.7% of respondents respectively reported an increase in interest charges over the last year. However, in Creative Industries and Advanced Materials and Manufacturing around one third of respondents reported an increase in interest charges. The largest number of respondents in a priority sector seeing a decrease in costs was in ICT with 11.7%.
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Cardiff Business School and Federation of Small Businesses Wales
10. Challenges Facing Business 10.1 T able 16 examines the issues facing business in Wales, both financial and other concerns such as access to skills and materials. The two greatest concerns facing survey respondents across all sectors were increased business costs and taxes. Around 40% of survey respondents cited increasing costs and tax levels as problems that they were facing. Table 16 shows limited variance in these findings
across the priority sectors. In terms of access to finance this seemed to be more of a problem for respondents in Advanced Materials and Life Sciences. Poor cash flows did not appear to be a particular problem for respondents in Food and Farming, Life Sciences and Tourism. Business rates were cited as a problem for nearly half of all respondents in the Food and Farming sector.
Table 16. Key problems faced by survey respondents (% of respondents citing problems from each sector) difficulty poor finding skilled cashflow workers
increased business costs
access to finance
poor sales
All Sectors
27.3
29.0
26.8
19.6
40.2
17.8
39.2
Construction
31.7
22.9
35.7
17.6
39.9
17.2
35.0
Energy and Environment
28.5
24.4
43.9
23.1
28.5
8.3
43.3
Creative industries
23.7
34.8
29.3
22.7
37.4
17.2
34.8
Food and Farming
33.2
20.5
13.8
26.2
46.9
10.3
49.1
Financial and Professional services
32.5
30.3
26.3
25.9
36.0
6.7
42.3
Life Sciences
40.0
34.3
14.3
28.6
20.0
28.6
34.3
ICT
27.3
36.1
29.9
24.6
36.1
13.6
32.5
Advanced materials and manufacturing
40.0
33.3
40.0
6.7
33.3
20.2
26.7
Tourism
24.6
33.7
21.1
20.5
41.3
22.1
36.7
Sector
10.2 T he survey expanded on this area by examining how further business support could improve activity. Table 17 displays the results. Marketing is a stand out area where respondents across all sectors believed additional support would be useful to them. Over half of all respondents also cited financial advice and IT/computing assistance as areas where additional assistance would be valuable. 10.3 T he variation in responses across the priority sectors is of interest. For example, while approximately 70% of respondents in Construction, Energy and the Environment, and Tourism cited financial advice as a
maintaining good Taxes including supplier relations buiness rates
means of improving their activity, this fell to 32% in ICT. Legal advice was important to over half of respondents in Construction, Energy, Financial and Professional Services, and Life Sciences but important to just 14% of firms in Advanced Material and Manufacturing. A small number of respondents identified export support as an areas where they required additional assistance. Life sciences was the one exception here. This may link to the simple lack of opportunity to export or more problematically a simple lack of ambition in this direction. However, in summary, the table shows that business support priorities vary according to sector.
Table 17 Areas of Business Support (% of respondents in each sector citing support in the area as important to them) Financial advice
Legal Advice
HR Support
Marketing support
Exporting support
it and computing support
All Sectors
55.3
42.8
29.6
69.5
22.1
50.5
Construction
69.7
53.1
31.3
54.5
21.9
56.3
Energy and Environment
71.4
57.1
14.3
71.4
14.3
57.1
Creative industries
41.2
29.4
29.4
64.7
29.4
41.2
Food and Farming
66.7
36.4
45.5
83.3
16.7
53.8
Financial and Professional services
40.7
55.6
29.6
82.1
16.0
55.6
ICT
32.3
32.3
29.0
61.3
20.7
25.8
Life Sciences
50.0
50.0
75.0
100.0
100.0
75.0
Advanced materials and manufacturing
42.9
14.3
42.9
57.1
42.9
42.9
Tourism
69.2
43.1
22.0
74.5
18.4
59.6
Sector
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Small Businesses in Priority Sectors
10. Challenges Facing Business Cont. 10.4 B usiness support provision was also explored. One survey question asked respondents whether they had faced problems in finding Welsh Government business support. Table 18 displays the percentage of respondents who found it difficult to access this. On average over 42% of respondents across all sectors reported problems in finding appropriate Welsh Government business support. Table 18 reveals that a quarter of respondents in Food and Farming had experienced difficulties in accessing Welsh Government support, with this growing to 50% in the case of Life Sciences respondents.
Table 18 Problems in accessing Welsh Government Business Support
All Sectors KEY
Construction
44.1
sector
42.7
Financial and professional services
%
Problems in Accessing Business Support
Energy and Environment
28.6
Creative industries
10.5 T he survey evaluated respondent awareness of different types of support funds available in Wales. Table 19 displays the results of the knowledge of respondents versus the existence of current support programmes. Respondents in all sectors had a lack of awareness of JEREMIE funds but slighter higher awareness of other support mechanisms.
37.5
Food and Farming
25.0
Life Sciences 41.9
50.0
ICT
Advanced materials and manufacturing
10.6 H owever, no sector had respondent awareness exceeding 50%. On the positive this may simply be a reflection of some firms simply not requiring business support. However, linking this to earlier findings on need for support would suggest that this lack of awareness is a serious issue for policy makers. Two of the support mechanisms, JEREMIE and the Economic Growth Fund were not recognised by any of the respondents from Creative Industries or Life Sciences.
48.1
46.3
42.9
Tourism
Table 19 Respondent Unawareness of Welsh support funds Micro-business loan fund
wales sme investment fund
repayable business finance
Local Investment fund
jeremie
Economic growth fund
All Sectors
76.4
67.0
72.3
68.7
90.8
78.4
Construction
82.4
67.6
73.5
76.5
85.3
73.5
Energy and Environment
85.7
71.4
57.1
57.1
85.7
71.4
Creative industries
76.5
82.4
82.4
94.1
100.0
100.0
Food and Farming
69.2
69.2
69.2
69.2
92.3
76.9
Financial and Professional services
72.4
65.5
69.0
55.2
86.2
75.9
ICT
74.2
71.0
67.7
74.2
90.3
74.2
100.0
50.0
75.0
75.0
100.0
100.0
Advanced materials and manufacturing
71.4
57.1
71.4
28.6
100.0
66.7
Tourism
75.5
61.5
75.5
66.0
92.5
79.2
Sector
Life Sciences
Cardiff Business School and Federation of Small Businesses Wales
11. Conclusion: ERP and Small Firms 11.1 The actions that form part of the ERP programme are expected to support the development of specialist economic activity in priority sectors through dedicated industry panels. These sectors have been chosen by the Welsh Government on the basis of being identified as providing the greatest opportunity for economic growth. The role of SMEs in the ERP is significantly less clear. There is a great deal of conjecture over precisely how SME support can be delivered through multiple sector panels. There is a need to assess whether this approach to industrial development in Wales is the most appropriate one for SMEs.
11.2 The first and most critical piece of evidence for this debate is whether SMEs can easily put themselves into the priority sectors chosen by the Government. From the evidence in this report it is clear that the vast majority of SMEs are unaware of which sector best fits their businesses.
11.3 Furthermore those that did not put themselves in a priority sector, as given by the Welsh Government definitions, were able to do so when given a more disaggregated comprehensive breakdown. This was particularly noticeable in Advanced Materials and Manufacturing and Financial and Professional Services, where firms in niche activities such as publishing and marketing and manufacturing equipment production did not realise they were part of a priority sector.
11.4 This report examined the configuration of the priority sectors from an SME perspective. Multiple dimensions have been used to scope the differences in activity across sectors. First, trade is considered both in
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Small Businesses in Priority Sectors
11 Conclusion: ERP and Small Firms Cont. a conventional sense and online. There is a great variability amongst sectors when it comes to activity taking place in Wales. Some sectors such as Life Science have the majority of their business activity outside Wales, whereas Food and Farming sees much of their sales coming locally. Exporting is another key line of distinction: some sectors are not involved at all whereas others such as ICT see 42% of sales coming from exports. Online trade is less of an issue with most sectors having less than 10% of their turnover generated from the internet.
11.5 Financial performance is thought to be one of the underlying rationales for the implementation of the ERP. When looking at the financial performance of the firms in different sectors, sales have remained fairly constant over the period 11/12 with nearly 50% of respondents finding either little change or even increases. This performance has been fairly consistent across sectors with little outstanding differences.
11.6 Costs have increased across all sectors. Creative Industries appear to be very different than other industries with the highest constraints on profitability. Again financing appears to have little variation across sectors with most firms reporting the same constraints and methods used. A worrying trend is the use of credit cards and overdraft facilities, methods that traditionally carry high levels of interest. Taking all the findings of finance together it would appear that far from there being sector specific problems of SMEs there is a great deal of homogeneity.
Cardiff Business School and Federation of Small Businesses Wales
11.7 Turning to the forms of business support sought after by SMEs, marketing is a stand out area where the majority of firms across all sectors feel that they could benefit from some form of support. IT and legal advice also appear to be areas where firms across sectors feel they could benefit from additional support. The only area of business support with significant sectoral difference is exporting advice Finally, considering the methods of support currently offered by the Welsh Government, there was a lack of knowledge of any of the support funds, sector specific or otherwise. Taking into account the findings from both these pieces of data there is significant support for the idea that far from being sector specific, there is a greater need for generic support across sectors.
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Small Businesses in Priority Sectors
References Boschma, R. (2004) "Competitiveness of Regions from an Evolutionary Perspective," Regional Studies,, vol. 38(9), pages 1001-1014. Boschma, R. (2005) "Proximity and Innovation: A Critical Assessment," Regional Studies , vol. 39(1), pages 61-74. Bryan, J., Jones, C., Munday, M. (2005) "Investigating The Potential Of Key Sectors Using Multi-Sectoral Qualitative Analysis: A Welsh Case Study" Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy, volume 23(5), pages 633 – 656 Cooke, P. (2007) "How benchmarking can lever cluster competitiveness" International Journal of. Technology Management 38(3), pages 292-320 DTI, (2001) “Business Cluster in the UK – A First Assessment”, Department of Trade and Industry, UK Government. Levinthal, D. (1998) “The slow pace of rapid technological change, gradualism and punctuation in technological change”. Industrial and Corporate Change 12(7), pages 217-247. Mason, C., Brown, R. (2012) “Creating good public policy to support high-growth firms”. Small Business Economics. 38 (4), pages 399-418.
Porter, M.( 1990) The competitive advantage of nations. New York: The Free Press. Robertson, P.,Langlois, L. (1995) "Innovation, networks, and vertical integration," Research Policy, vol. 24(4), pages 543-562. Thorsten, B., Kunt, D., Martine, M. (2008). "Bank Financing for SMEs around the World: Drivers, Obstacles, Business Models, and Lending Practices," Policy Research Working Paper Series 4785, The World Bank. Thurow, L. (1992) Head to Head: the coming economic battle among Japan, Europe, and America. New York: Morrow. Todtling, F., Trippl, M. (2005) "One size fits all?: Towards a differentiated regional innovation policy approach," Research Policy, vol. 34(8), pages 1203-1219 Verhees, F., & Meulenberg, M. (2004) “Market Orientation, Innovativeness,Product Innovation, and Performance in Small Firms”. Journal of Small Business Management, 42(2), pages 134-154. Westhead, P. and Storey, D. (1997) Training Provision and Development of Small and Medium– Sized Enterprises, Research Report No. 26, London: DfEE.
Cardiff Business School and Federation of Small Businesses Wales
Report Authors Andrew Crawley Is a Research Fellow in Economics at Cardiff Business School. He has published reports on sector analysis and regional economic issues within Wales and Europe. His research interests lie in industrial economics, spatial and regional economic Analysis. Rick Delbridge Is Professor of Organisational Analysis at Cardiff Business School and a Senior Fellow of the ESRC/EPSRC Advanced Institute of Management Research. His research interests include the organisation and management of innovation. He is co-author of The Exceptional Manager (Oxford University Press). Max Munday Is Director of the Welsh Economy Research Unit at the Cardiff Business School and Professor of Economics. He has been involved in research projects that have examined the development of the Cardiff economy, and the development of key sectors in the city area.
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Contact Details Dr. Andrew Crawley Tel: +44(0)29 2087 5079 Email: crawleyAJ@cardiff.ac.uk
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