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Jeremy Corbyn
Jeremy Corbyn said late payments to suppliers were causing thousands to go bust every year. Photograph: Ian Forsyth/Getty
Jeremy Corbyn said late payments to suppliers were causing thousands to go bust every year. Photograph: Ian Forsyth/Getty

Corbyn attacks M&S and other big firms over late supplier payments

This article is more than 6 years old

Corporations rebut claims by party leader that they are profiting from ‘interest-free loans’ from suppliers

Jeremy Corbyn has said a Labour government would “declare war” on corporations that fail to pay suppliers on time, although the companies he singled out, such as M&S, have said they do not recognise his data. The Labour leader accused large companies, including E.ON, Capita and the BT group, of profiting from the late payments as he vowed to ease regulations on small businesses. But credit check agency Experian said its data should not be seen as a barometer of how fast a company pays its suppliers.

“Cash is king for any business, and big companies are managing their cash by borrowing – interest free – from their suppliers,” the Labour leader told a Federation for Small Business event.

“Some of the biggest names in business are holding cash piles that don’t actually belong to them. It’s a national scandal. And it’s stopping businesses from growing and causing thousands to go bust every year. It kills jobs and holds back economic growth.”

Labour said Corbyn’s attack on the corporations was based on analysing data from current Experian credit reports, which identified payment beyond terms, normally 30-60 days, by big companies.

In the figures quoted by Labour, M&S went 72 days beyond terms, Capita 82 days and the National Grid as long as 119 days. Others mentioned by Corbyn were 89 days for BT and 84 days for Vodafone.

Experian said the figures, taken from their report, said the figures only relate to invoices which are settled late and do not take into consideration payments made on time.

“The data relates to how late a business can expect any late payments to be, and not the company’s overall track record on the payment of suppliers,” a spokesman said. “It is intended for indicative purposes only, to inform specific business decisions, and we would not recommend it is used as an overall barometer of how a company pays suppliers.”

Almost all the companies named by Corbyn, including M&S, Capita and BT Group, disputed the figures in the speech. An M&S spokesperson said: “We don’t recognise these numbers at all. Over 99% of our supplier invoices are paid on time and we are signatories to the prompt payment code.”

A BT spokesman said the company spent £9.3bn with UK suppliers last year, 40% of which went to small businesses. “During 2015/16 the average number of days between BT being invoiced and payment to UK suppliers was 54 days, well below the figures claimed in this report, which we do not recognise,” the spokesman said.

Capita said it did not recognise the figures either and said 90% of invoices were paid within 30 days of receipt. A National Grid spokesman said the company was a signatory to the prompt payment code and “consistently pay at least 90% of our invoices on time”.

Vodafone said it paid SME suppliers 45 days on average from the invoice date. “We pay 90% of our invoices on time and, where this is not achieved, the most significant factor is receiving the invoices late from the supplier,” a spokesman said.

The FSB has estimated that prompt payments to suppliers could prevent 50,000 small businesses going under each year.

Any company bidding for public-sector contracts with a future Labour government would have to pay its own suppliers within 30 days, Corbyn said on Tuesday, and Labour would consider creating a binding arbitration system, with fines for persistent late-payers.

The Labour leader pledged not to increase the corporation tax rate for small businesses and to scrap quarterly reporting for businesses with turnover of less than £83,000, calling it “a burden, a distraction, that will hold entrepreneurs back”.

He said large corporations were “privileged” by the government in their tax affairs over ordinary people or small businesses. He joked about his own tax return mishap, where he was fined for a late payment, calling it a “donation” to HMRC.

“No one likes paying tax. We don’t wake up in the morning thinking, ‘Oh, I really must pay some more tax today’. But most of us know that taxes are essential to a civilised society and a successful economy,” he said. “So most of us play by the rules. We do our tax returns, as you know, mine seems to attract more attention than most but that’s OK, transparency is important.”

Corbyn has been repeatedly criticised by Theresa May for Labour’s pledge to borrow £500bn for investments, including in regional investment banks.

The party has struggled to rebuild trust in its economic credibility, with the latest Observer/Opinium poll showing 44% trust May and her chancellor, Philip Hammond, to run the economy, while just 15% say Corbyn and the shadow chancellor, John McDonnell, are trustworthy.

Amanda Milling, a Conservative member of the Commons business, energy and industrial strategy select committee, said Labour’s pledge to borrow to invest £500bn would “crash the economy, just like they did last time”.

In remarks on Tuesday that anticipated some of the criticism, Corbyn said: “The prime minister frequently accuses me of wanting to bankrupt Britain by borrowing money to fund investment. But, as every business person knows, there is a world of difference between borrowing for capital spending and borrowing to fund the payroll and day to day trading or service delivery.

“The risk of bankruptcy comes not when you borrow to invest in projects that will deliver growth but when you give tax breaks to big companies and the wealthy when you don’t have enough money to run public services.”

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