Skip to content

Education and Training

User login

Entrepreneurs Panel

Steve Purdham
Debbie Pierce
Richard O'Sullivan
Brian Hay
Gary Jacobson
Jeremy Roberts
Tony Caldeira
David Pollock
Ian Morris

Freeze regulation to create 300,000 jobs - FSB

An overhaul of the UK’s regulatory environment could provide the economy with a second economic stimulus, according to small business representatives.

The Government must put a stop to all new business regulation and simplify red tape if it is to seriously tackle rising unemployment, the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) said.

Ahead of the Conservative Party Conference in Manchester, the FSB outlined its proposals for creating and saving more than 300,000 jobs, and called for a moratorium on all new business regulations and a rapid simplification of “confusing bureaucracy”.

A survey of FSB members showed that nearly one in three businesses (27 per cent) that wanted to expand said they were put off doing so by complicated regulation. Of those businesses planning to down-size or close, 50 per cent said their decision was strongly influenced by the regulatory burdens they faced.

According to the Government’s own figures, 60 per cent of businesses listed regulation as an obstacle to success. Based on these statistics, the FSB estimates that removing these regulatory obstacles could create more than 258,000 new jobs and save more than 55,500 from being lost.

In a new policy paper entitled Regulatory Reform – a route to economic recovery, the FSB is proposing an overhaul of the UK’s regulatory structures, calling for a moratorium on business regulation. To boost the chances of job creation it says the Government must halt all new regulation during the recession and for the first 18 months after recovery.

It is also demanding accelerated simplification of current laws: employers, it says, are currently confused and put off by maternity and paternity law, discrimination law, and health and safety legislation.

  • Making money out of nurseries should be child’s play. Shouldn’t it? EN examines the real bottom line.

  • In times like these business travel has to pay for itself. EN finds out how to get the most from your budget.

  • The recession has changed the landscape for start-ups radically, with more now driven by necessity than desire. EN investigates.

  • Dr Vince Cable, the new business secretary, is ultimately responsible for curing UK Plc’s red tape ills. EN suggests some regulations he should consign to the dustbin.

  • Banks might be going easy on struggling companies but are they making those firms’ directors homeless instead? EN investigates.

Venue Finder

Five Minutes With

Frank McKenna has never exactly been shy about being the public face of the Downtown in Business brand, which he founded in Liverpool in 2004 and now boasts operations in Preston and Manchester (the latter launched earlier this year). His weekly, “Thank Frank it’s Friday” email missives, “Frankie Says” blog and Tarantino-inspired advertisements are cases in point.

There was nothing Woolley about Charles’s decision to buy into Asda in 1993. Elizabeth Donevan discreetly fills her handbag with sachets of ketchup as the founder of Rectory Foods reveals...