
Following its mention in the King’s Speech, the Small Business Protections Bill has now been put before Parliament.
The Bill introduces measures that are designed to help alleviate some of the difficulties smaller businesses face in getting paid. They include: - A 60-day cap on payment terms for large businesses paying small suppliers. - Mandatory interest on late payments. This is to be set at 8% above the Bank of England base rate. - A prohibition on withholding retention payments in construction contacts. - New powers for the Small Business Commissioner to be able to investigate businesses that have poor payment practices, arbitrate in disputes and fine persistent late payers. - A requirement for the boards or audit committees of large companies to publish explanations of late payment performance and what steps are being taken to improve.
Smaller businesses will be keenly watching the Bill’s progress through its Parliamentary processes to see when these measures will come into force.

A new report has concluded that late payments and rising costs are crippling Britain’s construction sector. Firms already in or at risk of financial distress make up more than eight in ten companies.

Companies House will introduce changes to accounts filing due to governmental reforms under the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 (ECCT Act 2023).

