New Xero research reveals South Africa’s small to medium businesses (SMEs) are each owed R99 800 in late payments at any given time according to their business decision-makers.
Given there are an estimated 2,5-million SMEs in South Africa, this means the national scale of late payments could equate to a staggering R249,5-billion.
The new State of Late Payments report reveals that a staggering 91% of small businesses are currently owed money outside of their payment terms. On average, SMEs waste 89.5 working hours per year – the equivalent of two working weeks – chasing late payments.
Colin Timmis, General Country Manager, Xero South Africa and professional accountant said: “It’s not right, or fair that SMEs have to deal with late payments. They live or die by their cash flow – and if they’re not paid, they can’t survive. Just think what they could do with an extra R99 800, it could contribute towards a salary or pay for some new technology.”
The National Development Plan aims to create 11 million new jobs in South Africa by 2030, and wants SMEs to generate 90% of these new roles. But this new research shows that if late payments aren’t tackled, growth may be stifled. More than a fifth (21%) of respondents that had invoices paid late said they struggled to pay their suppliers on time, and a similar amount (20%) said they struggled to pay their staff. Nearly half (47%) listed cash flow and late payments as one of the main threats to their long-term growth aspirations.
It’s not just the impact on financials and growth, late payments impact personal wellbeing too. Over a quarter of respondents (28%) had to borrow money from friends and family to keep their business afloat, over a third (34%) cited stress as an impact, and 20% have taken time off due to illness.
Getting paid on time would help entrepreneurs invest and grow their business. When asked what they would do with the late payments owed to them, a third would clear some debt (30%), increase headcount or raise salaries (38%) and invest in new business technology (29%). Such technology could be the key to tackling the late payment epidemic.
“It’s really positive to see that SMEs want to invest in new tech and growing their teams. But for this to happen, we need a collective effort to tackle this culture of late payments. There are some actions SMEs can take now to help reduce the burden; make sure you invoice early, use cloud accounting software to send automated payment reminders, and lean on your accounting partners for advice,” Timmis concluded.
Other key findings revealed:
- 17% said that the month of May carried the highest number of outstanding invoices
- Just over a fifth (21%) are struggling to pay for business-critical services
- 21% were refused access to finance because of late payments
- 19% are prevented/held back from investing in the business, innovating and growing