As we head towards the end of 2024, it has been a challenging year for businesses. Although inflation and interest rates have fallen, the economy remains flat, with cost bases high. Consumer confidence is fragile, with cost-of-living pressures still squeezing discretionary spend. Geopolitical tensions and regional conflicts are also complicating operations – especially for those businesses with manufacturing or service centres in eastern Europe, where the war in Ukraine is creating ongoing supply chain challenges.
2024 was also a year of exceptional levels of political change, with more elections around the world than any other year in living memory. We have a new government here in the UK and Donald Trump is set to return to the White House. The government’s Budget has become a big talking point (more on that shortly). Businesses loathe uncertainty because that hinders decision making – and there is plenty of uncertainty in the air as electoral and policy changes shake out and we move towards 2025. The conventional wisdom is that businesses are beset by growing levels of anxiety about where we may be headed.