Decrees against Scottish businesses dropped 25 per cent in first quarter
In the first three months of 2019, the number of decrees against Scottish businesses dropped by 25 per cent, compared to the same period of 2018, according to figures released today by Registry Trust.
The total, 561, was the lowest of any quarter on record.
Registry Trust is the non-profit organisation which collects decree and judgment information from jurisdictions throughout the British Isles and Ireland.
In Scotland, it collects information on small claims, summary, ordinary cause and simple procedure sheriff’s court decrees. A decree is incontrovertible proof that debt has not been managed.
The total value of decrees against businesses in the first quarter fell three per cent to £3.1 million. The average value of a business decree rose 30 per cent to £5,599 while the median, at £1,900, was up by 23 per cent compared to the same period the previous year.
The total number of decrees against companies dropped by 30 per cent from the previous year’s figures, to 398, though the average value of a decree in Q1 2019 jumped 98 per cent to £6,663 - a record high for the first quarter. The median increased by 38 per cent to £2,067 and the total value of decrees against Scottish companies rose by 39 per cent to £2.7 million.
The total number of decrees against generally smaller unincorporated businesses fell 11 per cent on Q1 2018’s figures, to 163 - also a record first quarter low. The total value also dropped to a record first quarter low of £489,041, down 63 per cent compared to the same period of 2018. The average value decreased by 58 per cent to £3,000, while the median value fell 15 per cent to £1,632.
During the first quarter of 2019, 5,253 debt decrees were registered against consumers, 28 per cent lower than Q1 2018. There was a 29 per cent decrease in the combined value of consumer decrees to £11.9 million. The average value of all consumer decrees fell to £2,267, two per cent lower than in the same period of 2018, and the median consumer decree increased by nine per cent to £1,289.
The number of small claims against consumers fell by 28 per cent in Q1 2019 to 4,857, with the total value down 24 per cent on Q1 2018’s figures to £7.4 million. The average value increased by five per cent to £1,520, and the median value rose by 11 per cent to £1,201.
Ordinary cause decrees against consumers in the first quarter of 2019 dropped by 23 per cent to 396, compared to the same period the previous year, while the total and average values fell to all time first quarter lows of £4.5 million and £11,437 respectively. The median value at £8,655 rose four per cent from Q1 2018 figures.
Only 4.39 per cent of decrees were marked as satisfied during the first quarter of 2019, less than half the 10.52 per cent of satisfied debt judgments in England and Wales, where satisfaction rates are generally higher owing to legal differences. This suggests advice agencies in Scotland should encourage clients to report when they have satisfied a debt.
Trust chairman Malcolm Hurlston CBE said: “These figures show a Scottish economy in robust health despite headwinds. The absence of judgments makes it easier to borrow responsibly – an important element to a strong economy.”