The
latest figures show the Government’s Funding for Lending scheme is failing to
support construction, as lending fell significantly in the last three months of
2012. Now the Federation of Master Builders
(FMB) has urged ministers to act, citing the results of its own major survey of
more than 1,000 member firms, which clearly show the ongoing restriction of
finance to SME construction businesses.
More
than 40 percent of construction SMEs surveyed said they had found it harder to
gain access to finance in the past two years, while 43 percent reported that
credit is more expensive than two years ago and 25 percent were subject to
increased charges for credit facilities.
The
survey also confirmed widespread fears that banks are actively discriminating
against construction firms, with 25 percent of respondents reporting they had
lost work as a result, and 16 percent saying they had been refused requests for
credit by a bank that had previously considered them trustworthy – explicitly
because they work in the construction industry.
Of
those surveyed, a quarter reported they had lost business or had to abandon
plans for growth or investment because they were unable to raise the necessary
funds, and 18 percent said that the number of staff they were able to employ
had fallen as a direct result.
The
FMB has now written to Michael Fallon, the Business and Enterprise Minister,
calling on him to end this discrimination against construction firms and boost
the beleaguered sector.
Brian
Berry, the FMB’s Chief Executive, said: “What we are seeing is that otherwise
viable and successful firms cannot access suitable finance for business
operations, including buying new equipment and plant. This is having a serious
knock-on effect on jobs and growth in the sector.”
This is yet another example of the
abject failure of this shambolic Tory-Lib Dem coalition’s handling of the
British economy. Construction is key to
boosting growth and employment but the coalition ministers are so far
out-of-touch they are incapable of doing the simplest of things to address the
downward spiral.
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