Leading British and American businesses have given a new vote of confidence in the strength of transatlantic ties on trade, business and economic relationships despite an uncertain political context with national elections this year in both the UK and US.
Today’s fourth annualĀ Transatlantic Confidence IndexĀ from BritishAmerican Business and Bain & Company shows US companies’ confidence in the UK as a place to do business has stabilised in 2024, after two back-to-back years of sharp drops in sentiment, driven by political and economic turbulence inĀ Britain, with multiple changes of Prime Minister, previous bouts of market turmoil, and the ongoing impact of the UK’s departure from the EU.
With UK companies’ confidence in the US business environment also little changed at high levels, combined British and American business sentiment on the transatlantic economic corridor remains firmly positive, BAB and Bain report. The headline BAB-Bain Transatlantic Confidence Index for 2024 shows a score of 7.1 out of 10, up from 7.0 last year ā boosted by the score for US investors’ confidence in the UK ticking up to 6.6, from 6.5 in 2023. The index for UK businesses’ confidence in the US was unchanged at 8.4 out of 10.
In a further signal of the continued, underlying strength of both markets and of the US-UK economic relationship, BAB and Bain note that investors from both sides of the Atlantic report stable or increasing confidence, and plan to maintain or increase investment levels in both countries. The findings suggest a current calming of conditions after a series of major disruptions for both US and UK business in recent years ā including the Covid-19 pandemic, resurgent inflation and higher costs of doing business in both nations ā as well as pointing to cautious optimism over AI and its potential boost to productivity.
Stable future policies for business seen as critical on both sides of the Atlantic
However, in a cautionary note amid heightened nervousness ahead of November’s US presidential election, the BAB-Bain report highlights a strong focus by companies on both sides of the Atlantic on the need for stable policies ā as well as stronger economic collaboration between the two countries.
Survey respondents in the UK rated the importance of UK/US policy stability, regardless of the outcome of elections, at 8.0 (on a 1 to 10 scale) while US respondents scored this at 7.4. Anxieties over policy stability also emerged from the survey’s examination of the two countries’ strengths and weaknesses: respondents raised concerns over political stability and regulatory certainty in the US, and over political stability, as well as talent mobility, in the UK.
Tax competitiveness a high-priority concern for both British and American business
Tax competitiveness also emerged from the survey as a high-priority concern for both British and American businesses. The UK tax environment emerged as a top three priority for more than 70% of US companies surveyed, up from 60% in 2023 ā standing out as the only notable adverse shift in sentiment on the UK among US investors in the wake of recent increases in corporate tax and concern over further potential rises. Similarly, in the US, the upcoming review of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act has provoked worries for UK businesses trading in America, with more than 70% citing a competitive tax environment as a top three priority, also up from 60% in 2023.
For both the UK and US markets, access to capital and to talent were called out by respondents as key strengths, as they have been in prior years’ surveys. UK investors highlighted US strengths in innovation and incentives for R&D investment as important to its attractiveness, while American investors in the UK also pointed to R&D incentives as an important strength forĀ Britain’sĀ business environment.
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