Recession is the catalyst for a decade of business change - CBINew trends emerging in supply chains, corporate finance and workforce dynamics |
The recession has raised concerns about commercial models, supply chains and finance that will reshape business behaviour well into the next decade, the CBI said today.
Launching its report "The Shape of Business - The Next 10 Years", the UK's leading business organisation said that the recession and credit crunch had become the catalysts for a new era.
The report flags four key areas of UK business where fresh approaches will develop because of the downturn:
Richard Lambert, CBI Director-General, said:
“We may be at the start of a new era for businesses, in which attitudes to finance and to corporate leadership are changed for a generation by the shock of the past two years.
"What we now need is a more balanced, less risky pathway to growth – one in which the short-term returns may be lower, but the long-term rewards for management success will be a lot more sustainable and secure.
"There are important questions around how businesses are going to finance growth and investment in the future. And in a more collaborative, less transactional world, closer relationships with customers, suppliers, employees and shareholders look like becoming the new norm.”
Many of the report's findings are supported by a new survey conducted by Ipsos MORI in October and November and sponsored by the CBI and business advisory firm Deloitte. The survey of business leaders, mostly CEOs and chairmen, and representing a UK workforce of almost 1m and a global turnover of around £1trillion, revealed a shift in attitudes towards financing and supply chains.
Over half (55%) said that they will now only tolerate a lower level of risk from gearing and, within that group, 70% said an economic recovery would not reverse their position. Two thirds (68%) expect no improvement in credit availability in 2010 and are reshaping their business financing: 50% said they would use less bank debt, 44% said they would rely more on equity finance, and 26% said they would make more use of bond issuance.
And when asked about supply chain fragility during the recovery, only 24% said that they are not concerned. Businesses were most worried about a unique, specialist supplier going bust; that the supplier's own supply chain would collapse; and that the supplier would be unable to obtain working capital.
Because of these ongoing threats, 68% of firms said they would be strengthening the level of partnerships with suppliers in the coming years. One in three (30%) said they would be increasing their number of suppliers. And around one in five said they would be offering finance to key suppliers, reducing dependency on 'just in time' processes, and shrinking geographic distances to suppliers.
Richard Lambert added:
"Firms looking to reduce risk and acknowledge their interdependence are seeking more collaborative ways of working through partnerships and joint ventures. Perhaps we will see a flourishing of supply chain finance – in which firms with the largest, most solid balance sheets help finance their smaller suppliers or customers.
"Businesses want to adapt to a harsher credit climate by finding new sources of funding. Why not encourage new forms of institutions to finance the growth of small and medium-sized enterprises through equity and debt? And why not make it easier for companies to raise money locally, perhaps through new regional banking and investment institutions, rather than having to rely on a few very big players in London and Edinburgh?"
John Connolly, Senior Partner and Chief Executive of Deloitte UK, said:
"The findings of this survey are consistent with those in Deloitte’s Quarterly CFO survey. We know that companies have identified certain long-term responses to the events of the past two years such as a more cautious approach to debt and, more generally an attitude of greater financial conservatism.
"We can recognise that many businesses have proven resilient to the effects of the downturn: profitability has taken a knock but the impact has been less pronounced than might have been expected. Corporate insolvencies are running at significantly lower levels than the recession of the early 1990s and unemployment, whilst still growing, is not as high as some people feared. The route to recovery is sure to present challenges, but UK business has shown it has the ability to respond with imagination and flexibility."
The survey, "Recession as a Catalyst for Change", also showed that higher credit costs are hitting business investment plans. However, investment for a low-carbon economy seems to have escaped the squeeze, and 88% said they would invest as much as planned before the recession, and 27% said they were planning to spend more than planned. Government policy on green issues is vital however, with two thirds (65%) citing it as an important influence on investment decisions.
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