Institute of Directors publishes Brexit contingency planning survey results
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- Published: Tuesday, 17 September 2019 07:53
The Institute of Directors (IoD) has called on the UK and EU to improve no deal planning efforts, as the results of a recent survey highlight the ‘impossible situation’ facing business leaders.
Members have ‘repeatedly expressed concern that a disorderly Brexit would hurt their organization’ says the IoD and this perception was tested in the survey. Faced with choosing between a no deal Brexit and a further Article 50 extension, a slim overall majority (51 percent) said that no deal would be more negative for their organization, though this was significantly above the 32 percent who believed further delay could have a worse impact.
With no deal still a possibility in a few weeks’ time, the IoD has renewed its call for targeted financial assistance to help small firms’ Brexit preparations, with new analysis underlining that directors of smaller organizations were notably less likely to feel fully prepared than their larger company counterparts.
Nearly a third of IoD members surveyed were engaging with relocation as part of their Brexit contingency planning, with 14 percent indicating they had already moved operations or were in the process of doing so. By comparison, 9 percent of directors overall said their organization was exploring onshoring operations to the UK in connection with Brexit.
Commenting on the figures, Allie Renison, Head of Europe and Trade Policy at the Institute of Directors, said:
“Firms are facing an impossible situation as they try to prepare in advance for the possibility of simultaneous sweeping changes on an unprecedented level. The idea of leaving the EU without a deal in place is certainly the bigger concern, but the prospect of repeated delays with no clear path forward is far from an appetizing prospect for enterprise.
“If Government wants the country to be ready, businesses urgently need more targeted help in the form of financial assistance to enable them to access the specialist advice they need. While efforts to inform and prepare have stepped up, there is a huge job to do and generic guidance naturally struggles to address firms’ differing unique challenges. Both the UK and its European counterparts must also step up clear communication about the full raft of changes that no deal would bring for business, as many key areas are still light on detail. After all, it’s companies who will have to make the new systems work, not just public sector infrastructure.
“Crucially, both UK and EU politicians need to strain every sinew to find a deal, extension or not. Compromise is not a dirty word, and neither side wants to be managing the fall-out of no deal for the foreseeable future. This is as much about the jobs and livelihoods of those who would be most affected as it is about politics and procedure.”
Other results from the survey, which was conducted between 1st-17th July 2019 and received 952 responses included:
Has your (primary) organisation prepared for the possibility of a no-deal Brexit?
Small (0-49) | Medium (50-249) | Large (250+) | |
We believe we are fully prepared | 13% | 12% | 26% |
We have done as much preparation as we can, but cannot be fully prepared | 52% | 58% | 57% |
We still have more preparation to do | 15% | 13% | 13% |
We do not expect Brexit to impact our organisation | 17% | 17% | 3% |
Don’t know | 3% | 1% | 1% |
Has Brexit led or will it lead to your (primary) organisation moving/setting up operations outside of the UK?
We have no intention to move or set up operations outside the UK in connection with Brexit | 63% |
We are doing so, but this has nothing to do with Brexit | 4% |
We are actively considering doing so | 11% |
We plan on doing so | 4% |
We have already done so/are already in the process of doing so | 14% |
Don't know | 4% |
Has Brexit led or will it lead to your (primary) organisation setting up operations in/moving (back) to the UK - in addition to any UK operations you may currently have? (i.e. on-shoring/re-shoring?)
We have no intention to move or set up operations in the UK in connection with Brexit | 77% |
We are doing so, but this has nothing to do with Brexit | 3% |
We are actively considering doing so | 1% |
We plan on doing so | 1% |
We have already done so/are already in the process of doing so | 7% |