The UK’s small businesses are bracing for another difficult year after the CBI warned that 200,000 jobs could disappear by Christmas as growth slows, inflation rises and business costs continue to climb. With energy prices increasing, employer National Insurance contributions higher, wage bills rising and consumer spending under pressure, many small and micro businesses say they are already operating on razor-thin margins. Business owners warn that unless ministers act quickly to ease the burden, the UK could face a new wave of closures, redundancies and shrinking high streets.
More pain and job losses forecast
The CBI says 200,000 jobs to go.
Energy bills up, taxes up, costs up and the UK’s smallest businesses are in the firing line.
We’re heading into another economic storm, according to the CBI. The business group which represents the UK’s biggest firms is warning that 200,000 more people will be out of work by Christmas and small businesses say they’re already feeling the squeeze.
The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) has delivered a grim forecast: the UK economy is slowing to a crawl, inflation is rising again, and the cost of doing business is hitting breaking point.
And for the UK’s 5.5 million small and micro businesses, this isn’t just bad news; it’s a potential knockout blow.
From cafés to tradespeople, shops and freelancers, small firms are being battered by:
- surging energy prices
- supply chain chaos from the Iran conflict
- rising National Insurance bills
- higher minimum wage costs
- shrinking consumer spending
- interest rates stuck at painful levels
The CBI says the UK is heading for growth of just 0.9% next year, barely above flatlining.
For small firms already running on fumes, that means:
- fewer customers
- tighter margins
- more closures
- more job losses
- less investment
- rising debt
One micro‑business owners are hanging on by their fingernails.
THE ECONOMY IS STALLING
The CBI says global shocks are piling onto Britain’s already weak growth.
But for small businesses, the conversation is already bleak:
- footfall is down
- costs are up
- borrowing is expensive
- customers are cutting back
- cashflow is collapsing
The CBI also predicts inflation heading back towards 4%, and that the Bank of England is unlikely to cut interest rates, meaning no relief on loans, overdrafts or credit.
“YOU CAN’T TAX YOUR WAY TO GROWTH” CBI tells Government
CBI boss Rain Newton‑Smith has warned that the government’s tax hikes are pushing British businesses to a “tipping point” calling out:
- higher employer National Insurance
- rising wage costs
- a £345bn business tax burden over two Budgets
She delivered a blunt message to ministers:
“You cannot fix the cost of living without fixing the cost of doing business.”
Small firms say they’re being hit hardest because they:
- can’t absorb rising costs
- can’t negotiate cheaper energy
- can’t pass prices onto customers
- can’t access big‑business tax breaks
For many, the maths simply doesn’t add up anymore.
If the CBI’s forecast is right, small firms face:
- more closures
- more redundancies
- fewer start‑ups
- shrinking high streets
- reduced investment
- rising insolvencies
With 200,000 more people expected to lose their jobs, consumer spending, the lifeblood of small businesses, will fall even further. This is the perfect storm small firms have been warning about for years.
Britain’s economy is slowing. Costs are rising. Taxes are climbing. Small businesses, without which the UK economy won’t survive, are being pushed to breaking point.
Unless something changes fast, the UK could see:
- a wave of small‑business closures
- a collapse in local economies
- fewer jobs
- weaker growth
Small firms aren’t asking for handouts. They’re asking for understanding and action.
If you are a small business, self employed or freelance -register to get free 24/7 help for your business – @business111com 
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