News

New report finds smaller businesses key to solving UK ‘Productivity Gap’

Smaller businesses have the potential to contribute to UK economic growth in three key areas

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  • As UK productivity levels have slowed, smaller businesses remain engines for growth, creating 60% of all private sector jobs and £1.6 trillion of revenue
  • Increasing internationalisation and innovation among smaller businesses are key to helping close the productivity gap, fostering continued growth and job creation
  • Encouraging domestically-focused UK SMEs to start or expand exporting could bring an additional £1.15bn gross value add to the UK economy within the first year

Goldman Sachs, in partnership with the British Business Bank and the Enterprise Research Centre with support from the Scale-Up Institute and Said Business School, Oxford University today released a new report detailing the critical role UK SMEs (small and medium-sized enterprises) can play in addressing the UK’s ‘productivity gap’, a deficit identified in the UK Government’s Productivity Plan (July 2015).

The report, Unlocking UK Productivity – Internationalisation and Innovation in SMEs finds that smaller businesses have the potential to contribute to UK economic growth in three key ways:

  • stimulating innovation
  • spurring competition
  • accelerating job creation.

UK smaller businesses are key contributors to UK growth, with around 10,000 high growth SMEs representing less than 1% of established businesses in the UK but generating 20% of all UK job growth. Despite this, innovation and internationalisation represent largely unexplored opportunities for boosting productivity growth in the sector.

More than 110,000 UK SMEs have the potential either to start exporting or expand their existing exports. If successfully encouraged, £1.15bn gross value (‘GVA’) could be added to the UK economy in the first year.

There is also evidence of a clear ‘growth ambition gap’ between UK SMEs and their counterparts in other G8 economies. In order to close this gap, the report recommends improvements in the entrepreneurial ecosystem to help build growth ambition – with improved access to capital and expanded business education being identified as critical enablers.

Alongside the report, Goldman Sachs today announced the expansion of the 10,000 Small Businesses programme in the UK. At a time when further engagement is needed to support the UK economy and boost productivity, the programme will be opened up to businesses throughout the UK, beyond the four current hubs. By expanding the programme’s reach, developing new partnerships and leveraging technology to deliver a new online and residential learning experience, including new modules on internationalization and innovation, 10,000 Small Businesses will support the entrepreneurial community and the UK’s overall growth agenda.  This week in partnership with Bloomberg L.P. and Programme Co-Chair Michael Bloomberg, we are also hosting the inaugural 10,000 Small Businesses UK Coaching Session, which brings together hundreds of high-growth small businesses for a day-long series of training sessions with experts from Goldman Sachs and Bloomberg L.P. experts designed to give these entrepreneurs the confidence and skills to tackle and overcome challenges and accelerate growth.

The Rt Hon Sajid Javid MP, Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills said:

“This report by Goldman Sachs and the British Business Bank highlights the important role that small firms can play in boosting productivity across the UK. Small businesses are the backbone of the British economy and I want to see more of them growing and creating jobs. There is support out there from Government and from programmes like the Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses initiative, and I would urge any small firm with big ambitions to consider it.”

Michael Sherwood and Richard Gnodde, co-CEOs of Goldman Sachs International added: We are very pleased to continue our commitment to supporting high-growth small businesses in the UK through our ’10,000 Small Businesses’ programme. We believe the private sector can make important contributions to supporting small business growth, creating jobs and boosting economic growth.”

Ron Emerson, Chairman, British Business Bank, said: “As a champion for smaller businesses in the UK, we are well aware of the importance of high growth SMEs to the nation’s economy. We are therefore delighted to have contributed to this report and welcome the expansion of Goldman Sachs Small Business 10,000 programme.”

 

ENDS

Contacts:

 Goldman Sachs           Fiona Laffan

+44 (0) 207-774-9649 or Fiona.Laffan@gs.com

British Business Bank

Scott Shearer, British Business Bank

scott.shearer@british-business-bank.co.uk

Nick Taylor, Seven Hills

+44 20 7199 6185 or nick.taylor@wearesevenhills.com

 

Notes to Editors:

 

Goldman Sachs

The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. is a leading global investment banking, securities and investment management firm that provides a wide range of financial services to a substantial and diversified client base that includes corporations, financial institutions, governments and high-net-worth individuals. Founded in 1869, the firm is headquartered in New York and maintains offices in all major financial centers around the world.

Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses UK

The 10,000 Small Businesses programme is an investment by the Goldman Sachs Foundation to provide high quality, structured and practically focused support to small business leaders who are seeking to grow their businesses with a view to growing economies. The programme is designed specifically for the leaders of established small businesses who have the ambition and the potential to generate substantial growth in their enterprises. Participants benefit from a full package of support with a strong focus on structured peer learning and the creation of communities of entrepreneurs.

British Business Bank

The British Business Bank was established to make finance markets for smaller businesses work better, enabling the sector to prosper, grow and build economic activity. Its objectives are to:

  • increase the supply of finance available to smaller businesses where markets don’t work effectively
  • help create a more diverse and vibrant finance market for smaller businesses, with a greater choice of options and providers
  • build confidence in the market by increasing smaller businesses’ understanding of the options available to them
  • achieve this whilst managing taxpayer resources efficiently and within a robust risk management framework.

British Business Bank plc is a development bank wholly owned by HM Government. The British Business Bank operates through a number of subsidiaries, including British Business Financial Services Limited. Neither British Business Bank plc nor British Business Financial Services Limited is authorised or regulated by the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) or the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). British Business Bank plc and its subsidiary entities are not banking institutions and do not operate as such. More information can be found at www.british-business-bank.co.uk