CFIT Coalition Shows Financial Health Tools Could Unlock £5bn in SME Lending
The Centre for Finance, Innovation and Technology (CFIT) today convened senior leaders from across financial services, fintech and government to launch its latest report with a path to improving access to finance for UK SMEs – the backbone of the UK economy.
At an event in London, attended by Blair McDougall MP, Minister for Small Business and Economic Transformation at the Department for Business and Trade, CFIT unveiled the outputs of its third Coalition, focused on tackling the systemic barriers that prevent SMEs from accessing the funding they need to start, scale and grow.
SMEs account for over 99% of UK businesses, yet many continue to face persistent challenges in accessing finance – driven by fragmented data, limited understanding of their financial health, and inefficiencies in lending processes. The opportunity here is significant, with CFIT’s Coalition showing that Financial Health Tools could unlock an estimated £5bn in SME lending with the benefits that brings to SMEs themselves and the wider economy.
A clear pathway to reform
The Coalition has developed a set of practical, scalable recommendations to address these challenges, focused on educating SMEs about their financial data to improve lending readiness, alongside lenders enhancing their guidance and support throughout the application process. The Coalition highlighted the role of Financial Health Tools, and tested examples of two SME Financial Health Dashboards, designed to do exactly that.
Blair McDougall MP, Minister for Small Business and Economic Transformation, said:
“Small and medium-sized enterprises are the backbone of the UK economy, and supporting them to access the finance they need to grow is central to delivering sustainable economic growth. This report from CFIT demonstrates the power of collaboration between industry and Government to tackle complex, systemic challenges. It sets out clear, practical steps to improve how finance is accessed and delivered, including the role that smart data and innovation can play in supporting small business growth.”
Anna Wallace, CEO of CFIT, said:
“This report shows that a significant part of the SME lending gap is fixable. Too many viable businesses are being locked out of finance not because capital is unavailable, but because they lack the visibility and guidance needed to be finance ready. CFIT’s role has been to bring the market together, test practical solutions, and show that there is a credible path to scale. The next step is clear: for lenders to embed these tools into the finance journey, and for Government to support the implementation of an accountability framework that allows them to work at scale.
If we can continue to work together to get that right, we can materially improve access to finance for SMEs and unlock growth across the UK economy.”
Industry alignment around practical next steps
The event today brought together stakeholders from across the ecosystem to discuss how the Coalition’s findings can be implemented in practice – including the role of banks, data providers, marketplaces and government in supporting SME growth. Following the publication of the report, panel discussions explored:
- How government and industry can collaborate to improve access to finance and drive economic growth
- How financial health tools can improve lending outcomes
- The role of data and technology in enabling better commercial credit decisions
- How AI and digital tools can support SME resilience and growth
Next steps
CFIT’s role in this programme has been specific and time-bound: to identify the market failure, convene the institutions needed to address it, test practical Financial Health Tools, and define the implementation agenda. This has produced the environment in which partners in industry and government can take the recommendations forward and drive real progress for SMEs.
CFIT now encourages lenders to provide access to Financial Health Tools before application, during application and after decline. The report’s recommendations look to Government to support embedding financial health tools into lending journeys to deliver better customer outcomes. It also recognises the role that public business channels can play in educating SMEs understanding of their financial data and strengthening business identity infrastructure.