The Bank of England’s decision to lower the interest rate to 4% was a close call, aiming to both tackle inflation and support a slowing economy and job market. This rate cut makes borrowing cheaper for businesses, giving them the chance to upgrade their payment systems, manage their cash better, and cut down on borrowing costs.
Look, cutting interest rates sounds nice, but it will not fix the real mess small businesses getting killed by late payments while running on fumes. We must take action against slow payers and implement instant payments to enable these businesses to flourish.
Bank of England narrowly votes to cut interest rates to 4% as balancing act continues
Key points
- The nine-member MPC voted by a majority of 5–4 to reduce the key interest rate, the “Bank Rate,” by 25 basis points rather than keeping it on hold.
- The voting reflects the finely balanced situation the MPC currently faces in terms of the factors driving monetary policy, according to BOE Governor Andrew Bailey.
- George Brown, senior economist at Schroders, said the latest rate cut was no surprise but said, “The path forward is anything but clear.”
Sure, cheaper borrowing sounds great on paper, but let us be honest that is not going to fix the cash flow crisis small businesses are dealing with right now.
Why Lower Interest Rates Won't Solve Your Cash Flow Crisis?
The Bank of England has cut interest rates to 4%, the lowest in over two years, following a narrow vote among policymakers. This move will lower mortgage costs for some borrowers but reduce returns for savers. Inflation is expected to peak at 4% in September, higher than the target, yet the economy is struggling to grow, and job market concerns remain.
Rising labour costs and global issues like bad weather have pushed up food prices, affecting low-income families the most.
But companies told the Bank that they expected UK labour costs to continue to push up food prices in the second half of the year, and to mitigate costs, they were having to cut staff.
Meanwhile, 24% of SMEs cited cash flow and working capital shortages as barriers to growth, with 71% lacking confidence in securing loans from traditional banking partners. This funding gap hindered both growth and innovation across the small business sector.
The root cause of this funding crisis demands immediate attention to payment practices.
Late Payment Reform Needed Before UK Small Businesses Cease to Exist
This growing crisis is destabilising UK firms at an accelerated rate, inducing cash flow insecurity and diverting valuable time that could otherwise be spent on innovation and growth. Reform that encourages legislative and private-sector coordination, with modern payment technologies, can no longer be viewed as merely optional: it must be made requisite.
For smaller companies operating on tight margins, the average 8.4-day wait for invoicing and the 30.5-day wait for payment processing can be devastating. With 36% of micro businesses reporting less than three months of cash reserves, these delays threaten their ability to pay bills, invest in growth, and meet their financial obligations. Beyond cash flow issues, late payments often force SMEs to seek external credit. It’s a process that comes with egregiously high interest rates or outright rejections if invoices are still pending.
Moreover, the bank’s challenge is to balance inflation control with support for a weak economy and fragile jobs.
While businesses battle late payments and tight cash flow, traditional payment systems pile on extra misery just as economic conditions turn uglier.
The Silent Killer: How Traditional Payments Drain SME Profits
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are grappling with the detrimental effects of slow cash flow and payment reconciliation, creating significant operational challenges and consuming valuable time.
Recent data from CreditorWatch reveals a 47% surge in invoice payment defaults over the past year, a key indicator of business stress.
Payment inefficiencies are further compounding these challenges, forcing businesses to dedicate substantial hours each week to reconciling payments rather than focusing on growth.
Fortunately, modern technology is finally stepping in to solve these payment headaches.
From Phones to Finances: How Technology is Helping People Stay Connected and Debt-Free
Vodafone has boosted its VOXI for now tariff to help those struggling financially to stay connected. Those receiving benefits can access the plan, which provides unlimited 5G data, calls and texts for only £10 a month and can be paused or cancelled at any time.
AperiData and Paypoint have revolutionised debt advice and money management support for UK Citizens Advice Bureau branches through their Open Banking-powered Customer Support Tool, empowering caseworkers and streamlining services when most needed.
Open Banking Adoption Hits Record High in 2025!
Open Banking in the UK just hit a major milestone. As of March 2025, 1 in 5 consumers and small businesses are now active users. This record-high adoption signals more than just growth. It reflects a shift toward a digital-first, data-powered economy.
The number of active Open Banking users in the UK reached 13.3 million in March 2025, marking an 18.4% penetration rate among those with online bank access.
While small businesses initially led the way, consumer adoption is now catching up fast. Both groups are showing similar usage rates, driven by better payment experiences, improved financial tools, and wider awareness.
Fintech firm Fintellity has an interesting proposition. Working primarily with ‘merchants who are deemed high risk, gambling operators, the firm’s custom-built payment platform uses open banking technology to speed up the onboarding process to meet Know Your Customer (KYC), Anti Money Laundering (AML) and Safer Gambling regulations.
Wondeful’s WooCommerce payment plugin allows merchants to receive instant bank payments from their customers, slash processing fees, remove friction at checkout, and improve security.
Wonderful’s innovative payment solutions introduce a new, vastly improved payment experience. When it’s time to pay, there are no requests for card details; customers simply select their bank and are connected to their mobile banking app to approve a pre-populated, instant payment.
Since 2016, Wonderful has operated the much-loved charity fundraising platform, Wonderful.org, which provides unlimited donation processing to UK charities at no cost whatsoever.
Small Business Owners: Stop Waiting for Rate Cuts to Save You
Cutting interest rates is a nice gesture, but let us be real it will not solve the cash flow nightmare most small businesses are living through. The real problem? Waiting weeks to get paid while bills keep coming, then wasting hours every week chasing down payments instead of running the business.
With nearly 40% of small companies operating on less than three months of cash reserves, late payments are not just annoying they are business killers. The good news is that over 13 million people are now using open banking for instant payments, so the technology is there.
What we really need are tougher rules to stop late payments and more businesses embracing these faster payment tools. Get that right, and small businesses will not just survive the current mess they will have the breathing room to grow and create jobs. That is a win for everyone.
Still searching for deeper perspectives? Gain a more profound understanding of the reality of rate cuts beyond just monetary policy.