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Slow payers should be barred from signing Prompt Payment Code
by Susie Hughes at 15:00 15/02/13 (News on Business)
Big businesses should be prevented from signing the Prompt Payment Code for their own marketing purposes when some firms take up to three months to pay suppliers. after it has learned firms with payment times as long as 90 days are planning to sign up.
The Forum for Private Business said it understands Unilever is the latest household name looking to sign the PPC despite its lengthy 90-day payment times for suppliers. Unilever – which has confirmed its intentions – increased supplier payment times in 2010, from 60 days to 90 days, in the months between the UK’s ‘double dip’ recession.

More recently, October saw Sainsbury’s increase non-food supplier payment times from 30 to 75 days, but only last month the supermarket giant indicated it will also seek to sign the PPC.

The Forum said this type of behaviour was clearly undermining the spirit of the Government sponsored PPC, even if it was not technically breaching the current eligibility requirements allowing firms to join. This, said the organisation’s Chief Executive, Phil Orford, shows the rules clearly have to be firmed up to prevent this type of abuse.

Ethical
Mr Orford said: “We feel big businesses are cynically using the Prompt Payment Code to boast of their ethical credentials to the wider public, when in fact they are anything but to their suppliers.

“No one in their right mind can think Unilever’s 90-day payment terms are ‘prompt’, so why should they be allowed to sign the Prompt Payment Code. It’s a ridiculous situation which has to stop.

“Companies like Unilever and Sainsbury’s are hoodwinking the public for their own PR purposes by signing, while the small firms who supply them see absolutely no change to cripplingly long payment times.”

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The Forum said it was speaking out ahead of Business Minister Michael Fallon’s naming and shaming exercise later this month, which will see FTSE 350 listed companies who have refused to sign the PPC exposed by the Minister.

Mr Orford said: “There’s absolutely no doubt that we are going to hear of a number of big name brands agreeing to sign the Code ahead of Mr Fallon’s announcement, but if these firms aren’t prepared to decrease their payment terms then quite frankly what’s the point them signing? It would be a meaningless, self-serving gesture, and we hope the public can see this.

“We think that standard net monthly, that is payment on or by the end of the month following the month of invoice, is more than ample time to settle up. Our own research last year showed in fact most local councils are paying in under 30 days, with many in under 10 days, so if notoriously inefficient local governments can cough up this fast, we see no reason why big business can’t.

“Certainly, those that have painfully slow payment times should not be eligible to sign the PPC."

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Susie Hughes © Shout99 2013

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