One thing buried towards the end of Chancellor Philip Hammond’s latest economic statement announcement this month was a detail that was somewhat overshadowed by the concern over Brexit — not enough companies take late payments seriously, which is affecting small and medium businesses across the UK. But there is a plan to tackle that.


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Four out of five small businesses have been paid late, according to the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB), with SMEs on average owed £6,142. Bacs Payment Schemes, which handles interbank transactions, said the country’s 5.7m SMEs were owed about £13bn in total. More than a third of small businesses say big companies have extended their payment terms in the past two years.

“Late payments have been a scourge for SMEs for a long time and we’ve seen many affected in the recent past by issues such as the collapse of Carillion,” explained Rick Smith, MD at Forbes Burton, Lincolnshire insolvency and company rescue specialists. “Contractors, labourers and those who perform short-form work often have problems with cash flow due to money owed not arriving in time. Many are often on the precipice thanks to waiting for overdue invoices to be paid.”

Chancellor Hammond said that big companies should appoint a non-executive director who would be responsible for reducing late payments to smaller suppliers. They must also publish payment practices in their annual reports. Rick Smith explained that the announcement now means larger companies have to report their payment terms, so those who routinely stretch out payments beyond their stated terms will have their details laid bare via portals like Companies House.

However, Rick’s not fully confident this will work: “While this is great news and companies wanting to deal with larger firms can now realistically see cash flow figures, it doesn’t do enough to make much of a difference. Too often we see companies go to the wall due to a large contract going unpaid or being paid too late. This kind of practice is shoddy and it needs to stop.”

How can this be improved? Rick believes penalties should be levied: “Reporting only goes so far. In a similar way, reporting of executives who earn over a certain threshold is mandatory and it appears when checking on a company’s credentials but nothing is restricted as a result. If companies faced penalties for this kind of issue then it would be taken a lot more seriously.”

Rick added that the FSB has also called for Project Bank Accounts (where members of the construction supply chain receive payment in five days or less from the due date) that solve the problem of late payments by acting as holding accounts. “This kind of security would prove useful for many companies, especially smaller SMEs who struggle regularly with issues such as this.”


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More than 6,100 people from across Greater Lincolnshire have now signed a viral petition to revoke Article 50 and remain in the EU.

The petition posted on Wednesday night was getting 1,500 signatures a minute, causing the Gov.uk website to crash on Thursday morning. The website is still under heavy demand.

At the time of writing, the petition had 778,562 signatures, more than 7 times the amount needed to secure a debate in Parliament.

As of 11.30am on March 21, over 6,100 people from our region signed the petition.

Most were from Lincoln, at over 1,000 signatures, followed by Grantham at 922 and Sleaford and North Hykeham at 894.

Grimsby and Boston, places with high percentages of leave votes in 2016, are at the bottom of the list.

Here is the full breakdown:

  • Lincoln 1,032
  • Grantham and Stamford 922
  • Sleaford & North Hykeham 894
  • Gainsborough 654
  • Louth and Horncastle 471
  • South Holland and The Deepings 457
  • Brigg and Goole 384
  • Cleethorpes 373
  • Scunthorpe 361
  • Great Grimsby 298
  • Boston and Skegness 270

Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to march in London on Saturday requesting a people’s vote on the Brexit deal.

At least two coaches are set to come from Lincoln, organised by local campaigners.

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