Regulations burden small businesses

Published on Fri, 02/09/2011, 03:57:37

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The Franchise Council of Australia (FCA) has warned that the government should be wary of adding red tape and regulatory burdens when business confidence is low – a key message that was highlighted in a Deloitte’s small business survey.

The Black Ink survey reports a stagnation of business growth amongst accounting and legal SMEs, with only 3.8 per cent of respondents saying clients had experienced business growth in the previous quarter, down from 45.1 per cent in June 2010. It identified regulation as an area of concern.

Partner and national leader of Deloitte’s Black Ink program, Neil Cussen, said the result showed the middle market was struggling and that the road to financial recovery could take longer than expected for some sectors of the economy.

“SMEs are increasingly coming under pressure from a range of international and domestic economic influences – sovereign debt issues, falling consumer sentiment, increased regulatory changes at home and the spate of natural disasters have all conspired to have a detrimental impact on many businesses,” he said.

The survey follows recent official statistics showing South Australia lagging behind the rest of the country in terms of business/consumer confidence.

FCA executive director Steve Wright said the report is disconcerting news for the $9 billion South Australian franchise sector and the thousands of franchisees and employees who work in it.

“The strong message to the South Australian Government should be that at this time the small business sector needs proactive support, not extra taxpayer funded bureaucracy which will serve only to put a brake on business investment,” he said.


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I think the 'middle market' has been struggling for quite some time. Seems to be a race to the bottom for many. And why bother warning this government of anything? They don't listen to SME's!
Posted by J. Katz. 05/09/2011 02:56:25 PM
Due to the push of on line shopping,It is very hard to make a dollar in these large shopping centers. The rents are far to high and should be investigated the only one making the money are the landlords and it's high time for a change. Take one dollar, take out the GST, take out the Rent, take out Wages, take out Accounting Fees, take out Insurances & Legals, What about your Stock and Advertising. Today you would have to be "nuts" to have a small business in a large shopping center. These greedy stand over landlords are criminal
Posted by jane. 01/03/2012 07:47:32 PM
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