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Global chief executives bullish about the UK

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UK in top three countries to invest in

Global chief executives rank the UK as the third most important country for investment, jointly with Germany and behind only the US and China.

Despite recent political turmoil, chief executives are increasingly bullish about the UK, according to PwC’s 26th annual Global CEO Survey. Only 9% selected the UK as a market to grow revenue in 2020, compared with 18% who selected it this year.

Kevin Ellis, the Chairman and Senior Partner of PwC UK, said that strength in areas such as artificial intelligence and biotech, alongside a business-friendly environment, made the UK an increasingly attractive market.

He commented: “Chief executives don’t expand and invest on a whim — they’re choosing the UK as that’s where they expect to see returns. To keep the UK attractive, we need renewed focus on skills and regional growth, both of which will help unlock productivity.”

It reveals that UK bosses are more upbeat than their international counterparts: only 4 per cent of UK chief executives expect the economy to decline significantly, while the proportion among global chief executives is 12%. However, only 21% of UK chief executives expect the global economy to improve in the next 12 months, down from 82% last year.

Despite this, UK chief executives are upbeat about their own companies’ prospects: 48% are ‘very or extremely confident’ about prospects in the next 12 months, compared with 42% of global chief executives.

In the longer term, almost one in four UK chief executives fear their companies will not be economically viable within a decade without significant changes to their business model.

Ellis said: “Businesses have already undergone massive change this decade. But this is the tip of the iceberg — many CEOs believe their current business models are unsustainable and this means more change ahead. This isn’t about tinkering but fundamental changes requiring big investment in people, skills and technology.”

More than a quarter (26%) of UK chief executives said that they were ‘moderately or extremely exposed to the threat of climate change over the next 12 months’, compared with 39% of chief executives globally.

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