Family Business Insights
Family Businesses Deserve More Love – KPMG
.jpg)
We talk to the accountancy giant about the work its experts have done in tracking the needs of family businesses and the structures set up to handle intergenerational wealth transfer and succession.
Family businesses achieve long-term success but their
contribution to the global economy too often falls under the
regular media and policymaking radar, according to KPMG, which recently
issued a report on the space.
Some 35 per cent of global gross domestic product is in the hands
of family-run firms, Tom McGinness, global leader, family
business, KPMG Private Enterprise, KPMG International, told this
news service in a call.
“It doesn’t get the level of coverage that listed companies do.
It is time to explode some of the myths about family businesses.
They are incredibly agile and innovative; they are attractive to
employees going forward and have a clear sense of purpose,”
McGinness said.
Government policy, not just covering tax, needs to be
focused on encouraging such business, he continued. For example,
policies to encourage family-owned businesses could be part
of the UK and other governments' so-called “levelling up”
agendas.
In May, KPMG Private Enterprise and the STEP Project Global
Consortium issued a report saying that family businesses' secret
to success lies in their emotional attachment to the firm as well
as the ability of next generation family members to experience
life outside the business and take risks. The Global Family
Business Report brings together insights from 2,439 CEOs and
other leaders from top family businesses across 70 countries and
territories, illustrating the common factors that make up the
formula for family business resilience and regeneration.
When the older generation retires and moves away from a business,
some families are selling, cashing in on their business and
creating family offices. They have concerns such as rises in
capital gains taxes – some business exits have been timed to
avoid potential rises in the future, McGinness said.
“As they hand [over] to the next gen, that generation has
different values,” he said, citing interests such as ESG. “They
may want to take a business in a different direction. For
example, if the original business was in fossil fuels, they will
want to remove it from that [area].”
"There has been a rise in focused family governance and searches
for solutions, and for things such as a constitution framework. A
lot of that is driven by trying to mitigate risks,” he said.
Risks include areas such as liquidity.
McGinness described how family-owned firms can often be less
visible than public companies with no family control, even though
they collectively wield a lot of business and economic
muscle.
Discussing other details, McGinness said he was disappointed at
the low percentage (19 per cent) of women in CEO roles. “The
diversity and inclusion agenda is something that needs to be
revised,” he said.
Family businesses planning for the future need to consider
diversifying their product and service lines, and
entering new sectors in order to be more diversified, he
said. Importantly, families can help younger members by
entrusting them with seed capital to start new firms and remain
part of a wider family network.