Business Register Outputs in Support of Regional Policy John Perry UK Office for National Statistics
Dec 16, 2015
Business Register Outputs in Support of Regional Policy
John Perry
UK Office for National Statistics
The Projects
• Enhanced outputs for regional accounts and other regional enterprise statistics, in support of the Review of Statistics for Economic Policymaking (Allsopp Review)
• Provision of small area outputs, in support of the UK government Neighbourhood Statistics Programme
The Inter-Departmental Business Register (IDBR)
Existing Sources
Current coverage of enterprises– VAT Traders– PAYE Tax Employers– Supported by:
• Companies House registrations• Dun and Bradstreet linkage• ONS and other statistical surveys
Extending coverage of enterprises– From Companies House– Identifying those without VAT or PAYE registration– Evaluating to see which should be on the IDBR– Establishing rules for adding
Improving quality
• Boost for the Business Register Survey for small enterprises
• Extended business profiling• Merged the Business Register Survey with the
employment collection within the Structural Business Survey
• Developing a replacement Business Register and Employment Survey
– Better local unit employment estimates– Local turnover estimates (subject to a successful pilot in
2007)
Existing Outputs
• Survey samples and survey populations• Lists of businesses - confidential• Publications
– UK Businesses on National Statistics website– Business demography on DTI website
• Tabulations to user specifications, including disclosive figures
New Outputs
• Small area tables for enterprises and local units on the Neighbourhood Statistics web site:
– Based on 2001 Population Census output areas– 6 tables in 2004– 19 in 2005
• New tables for “UK Business” publication– Parliamentary Constituencies– More local unit tables
• New tools for presentation– Interactive charts– Interactive maps
New Sources
• Corporation Tax– Link to Company Annual Accounts– Needs new legal gateway– Good indicator of trading businesses– Range of accounting variables– Potential for reducing compliance
• Yell – Commercial Source– Good source for business telephone numbers– Difficult to use to extend coverage– Data sharing require some care
The Regions
Working with the regions
• ONS appointed statisticians in the English regions in April 2007
• Co-located with the Regional Development Agencies (RDA)
• RDA responsible for economic development• Work done to establish the statistical requirements• Training needed in use of the business register
Regional data requirements
• Monitor turnover and employment changes in their areas
• Create clusters of businesses to monitor performance
• Monitor businesses receiving assistance against other businesses
• Work with local planning authorities• Provide feedback on business register quality
based on local knowledge
Legal Framework
• Data access limited by current legislation• Statistical use of disclosive and micro data
permitted by:– Government departments – including the ONS regional
statisticians– Local authorities– Some other public bodies– Government contractors
• Not RDA’s
Improving access
• Statistics and Registration Bill to create an independent ONS
• Has provisions to enable wider data sharing with public bodies
• But requires secondary legislation to implement• Follows the April 2008 creation of independent
ONS• In the interim, ONS regional statisticians will be an
important channel for dissemination of disclosure-free outputs
Benefits
• Quality improvement (extended coverage, better surveys and more focus to business profiling)
• More small area outputs• Improved support for regional customers