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WQ.289/2023

WRITTEN QUESTION TO THE CHIEF MINISTER BY DEPUTY R.S. KOVACS OF ST. SAVIOUR QUESTION SUBMITTED ON MONDAY 19th JUNE 2023 ANSWER TO BE TABLED ON MONDAY 26th JUNE 2023

Question

“Will the Minister state –

  1. how many new businesses have been launched each year since 2019;
  2. of those, how many were small businesses and in which industry do they operate;
  3. for eachofthe businesses identified in (b) (anonymised if necessary) would the Minister provide detailsas to –
    1. how many  employment  licences  for  under 5-year residency  were  received  upon commencement of trading and how many are held currently;
    2. what proportion of total current staff ismade up of employment licences for under 5-year residency;
    3. how many applications for employment licences for under5-year residency have been refused and, in each case, what was the reason; and
  4. what are the criteria pursuant to which licences for employment are awarded to businesses?”

Answer (a)

We cannot measure business ‘launches’ but can report on the number of applications for new business licences under the Control of Housing and Work Law as below.

 

Year

New Business Licence Applications (Resident Businesses).

*Figures exclude Non Resident business licenses

2019

995

2020

1087

2021

1190

2022

981

2023

(up to 31/03/2023)

286

These figures show the number of individuals given permission to start a new business. The business does not need any additional permission to start trading so this is not specifically recorded by government.

(b)

The Control of Housing and Work Law does not include a definition for ‘small business’. A business can change its numbers of employees over time, either through growth/contraction, due to seasonal activity, or the greater economic/business cycle.

The process to register a new business does not include collecting information on the number of locally qualified people to be employed in the business. Many businesses are set up as sole traders without employees.

Data is available for new businesses based on number of employees at the point of their first manpower return after their first application for a business license. Manpower returns are made every 6 months.

Year of Initial  Classification

Business Licence

33  793

 

2020

32  846

2021

14  995

2022

19  714

     

Application  6 or more  5 or fewer employees  employees

Note that

not every business will start trading immediately and so they may not be included in the next manpower turn.

some businesses will only trade for a short period and may not be captured on a manpower return

some individuals may be granted a business licence but then choose not to set up the business

Looking at the businesses that were recorded on the first manpower return after the business licence was approved and the number of employees on that manpower return was 5 or less, the following information by sector is set out below. Note the reservations above that this will not include every new small business.

 

Industry Sector of 'Small Businesses'

Year that Licence granted

 

2019

2020

2021

2022

Agriculture and fishing

17

17

25

21

Computer and related activities

32

47

35

37

Construction and quarrying

83

105

129

82

Education health and other services

220

213

210

160

Electricity gas and water supply

1

 

 

 

Financial and legal activities

35

47

38

30

Hotels restaurants & bars

27

38

36

25

Manufacturing

49

24

56

24

Real estate and other business activities

203

190

302

232

Transport storage and communication

37

24

22

29

Wholesale and retail trades

89

141

142

74

Total

793

846

995

714

*Industry sector as recorded at time of business licence approval . Industry sectors for an undertaking may have changed with time.

In broader terms, the 6 monthly Statistics Jersey Labour Market Reports provide regular breakdowns of Private Sector Undertakings by number of employees. These are published on gov.je and include all businesses. An extract from the most recent publication has been provided below:

(c)i & (c)ii

CLS does not record when a business undertaking launches to the public or begins to trade for the first time. A business owner may commence trading at any point after they have received a valid business licence.

CLS records when a business applies for Registered or Licensed Staffing Permissions. An undertaking may apply for these permissions at the time of first registering their undertaking, or these staffing permissions may be applied for at a later date.

Note that licensed posts are valid for up to 10 years and it is not possible to differentiate between 0-5 years licensed employees and 5-10 years licensed employees. The figures below include all licensed employees in the selected businesses.

Looking at the businesses that were recorded on the first manpower return after the business licence was approved and the number of employees on that manpower return was 5 or less, the following information on staffing permissions is set out below. Note the reservations above that this will not include every new small business.

 

Year of Initial Business Licence Application

Total Small Businesses

Initial Business Licence

Last Valid Business Licence*

(As @ 2023-06-20)

Total Registered Permissions

Total Licensed Permissions

Total Registered Permissions

Total Licensed Permissions

2019

793

12

33

101

40

2020

846

16

41

67

56

2021

995

33

52

118

59

2022

714

19

21

37

38

* Note that the current position relates to businesses that are still operating.

Looking at the businesses that were recorded on the first manpower return after the business licence was approved and the number of employees on that manpower return was 5 or less, the following information on the proportions of registered and licensed staff recorded on the 2022 manpower return is set out below. Note the reservations above that this will not include every new small business.

Not every business included in this category has provided a manpower return for December 2022. Not every business includes any employees.

 

Proportion of Employees Registered or Licensed on 2022 Dec Manpower Return

Year of Initial Business Licence Application

2019

2020

2021

2022

 

0%-10%

396

467

621

536

 

11%-20%

6

5

10

1

 

21%-30%

8

8

3

6

 

31%-40%

8

7

15

2

 

41%-50%

9

14

13

12

 

51%-60%

 

 

1

 

 

61%-70%

1

 

2

 

 

71%-80%

 

 

3

1

 

91%-100%

12

23

29

32

 

No 2022 Dec Manpower Return

260

215

166

20

 

No Employees

93

107

132

104

 

Total

793

846

995

714

 

In broader terms, the Statistics Jersey Labour market report provides a regular breakdown of the proportion of the Labour Market employed on a Registered or Licensed Permission.

For the subset of 5 employees or less undertakings which applied for a Business License between 2019- 01-01 and 2023-03-31 where there is a relevant manpower return and employees, in total about 9% of their employee workforce is either Registered or Licensed.

(c)iii

The details behind any staffing permission refusals are recorded in the decision letter sent to the business owner as part of their application for a variation of their business license. There may be one or more reasons, to refuse one or more of any of the requested staffing permissions. Therefore, it not simple to collapse down the circumstances of each case into a single simple reason for refusal.

It would take manual review of each application to first extract detail from customer correspondence to, then summarise common themes.

Using the same group as above, this table provides a summary of the number of applications for staffing permissions that have been refused.

 

Year of Initial Business Licence Application

Total Small Businesses

Initial Business Licence

Total Registered Permissions Refused

Total Licensed Permissions Refused

2019

793

3

1

2020

846

4

0

2021

995

0

0

2022

714

0

1

(d)

When deciding whether to grant a business licence, additional Registered and Licensed permissions (for employees), or vary the conditions of a business licence, as specified in Article 26(9) of CHWL the following matters are relevant:

  1. Preserving and maximising the benefits of Jersey’s resources
  2. Promoting a balanced and prosperous economy
  3. Protecting the integrity and reputation of Jersey in commercial and financial matters
  4. Any relevant policies ofthe States of Jersey
  5. Whether such a grant would bein the public interest; and
  6. In the caseof a hawker’s licence, whether the applicant is a fit and proper person.

Criteria used to review an application

Officers will review the application against two sets of criteria

  1. Qualifying criteria

Unless there are exceptional circumstances, the application must pass through all 7 of the checks below before progressing to the main criteria

 

There are no ongoing investigations against the business related to employing Registered or Licensed staff without permission

The exact same application has not already been refused (if details within the application have changed this can be accepted)

The individual is not within 6 months of gaining Entitled for work status

The business does not already have a spare Registered or Licensed permission that could be used for this role

The role has been advertised publicly in Jersey within the past 3 months and the business can provide evidence of this

Back to Work recruitment have no suitable candidates for the vacancy

The reasons provided to explain why Entitled/Entitled for work applicants were not suitable are fair and reasonable

  1. Main criteria

There is no set number of main criteria an application must meet to be approved. The strength of each factor is considered in the context of the business, industry and circumstances outlined in each application.

 

How important is the role to the business?

Is the salary set at an appropriate level for the role and industry to ensure an employee receives a fair and positive salary

Does the business already have more Registered or Licensed permissions than similar size and scale organisations in its industry?

Does the role have experience/qualifications requirements that make the role hard to recruit for locally and could not be developed through an apprentice/trainee role?

Is the business economically sustainable? (e.g. profitable after all costs) with a positive track record?

Does the role support the business to provide services with outstanding social or community value?

How much effort is the business making to attract, value, retain and develop its employees? Examples could include (but not limited to) offering flexible hours, considering job share, part time roles, student employment, offering progression, qualifications, development, support, reward and positive terms and conditions (working hours, leave etc).

If a business is not doing any of these things, this may explain why it is finding a role hard to fill rather than there being a genuine skills or person shortage.

Will the skills of the role or individual help train other employees within the business or help the business/sector innovate?

Where the permissions will see a growth in total employee numbers, does the business case demonstrate sufficient predicted increase in business/income to warrant and afford the salaries of the new employees if the permissions are granted?