Invitation for businesses to participate during the Verdala International School career week
10 January 2025
Verdala International School in Pembroke is currently planning to host a career week for Grade...
Family Business Conference – Speech by Vince Farrugia, Director General
What is a Family Business?
Talking about family business may conjure up thoughts of small father and son firms but family enterprises form a backbone running right through the economy who are particularly prevalent in the micro business sector (firms with fewer than 10 employees) are also common in the rest of the small and medium enterprise (SME) sector. Some of the very largest private companies are also family firms.
Family firms vary significantly in size and differ in the degree of family involvement in the business. Some families will take a role in the day-to-day running of the business, whilst others will take a more hands-off approach with the involvement of professional non-family managers. Family firms range in terms of longevity from early-stage to long-standing multi-generational firms.
Precise definitions of a family business vary, but the firms should have to meet some criteria about their ownership or management. A commonly accepted definition, as worded by "The Family Entrepreneurship Working Group" set up by the Finnish Ministry of Trade and Industry in 2004, is that:
In addition, and particularly to smaller firms, subjective criteria need to be employed in order to distinguish family firms from entrepreneurs in other owner-managed firms more generally. Most obviously, the firm itself can be asked whether it considers itself to be a family business.
The tightest control is in owner-managed firms, which are owned by a single person who is also the only managing director. Sole-traders are therefore owner managed. Bigger firms are more likely to be family-managed, where the ownership and management is in the hands of at least 2 family members. In family-controlled firms, the family takes a more hands-off approach and the management and/or ownership is shared with non-family members. The family remains in full control of the company, however, by holding a significant proportion of the voting rights. The largest family firms will be family-controlled.
For small and medium-sized firms, around 40% are owner-managed, 45% family-managed and 15% family-controlled.
Family firms are particularly prevalent in agriculture and construction and retail and services. Within the services sector, family firms are most likely to be found in distribution, hospitality, catering and tourism. They are under-represented in sectors such as finance, manufacturing, banking, telecommunications, insurance and business service. This no doubt reflects the high start up costs involved in these sectors.
A sample survey by GRTU found that 77% of family firms in the SME sector are controlled by the first generation, 10% by the second generation and 6% by the first and second generation. Only around a third of family firms tend to be passed onto the second generation and one tenth reach the third generation, the rest being either sold or closed down.
Surveys elsewhere show that the bigger – and probably older- the firm, the more likely that it has already been passed onto future generations; family firms in the SME sector with at least 10 employees are twice as likely as those with fewer than 10 employees to be controlled by the second generation. The generation of ownership also varies by sector, with agricultural businesses most likely to be controlled by the second generation.
Our survey of family firms suggests that most have no definitive plans abut what to do with the firm in the future, with 61% of owners saying they had made no decision about what would happen when they stepped down from the helm. Of the remainder, 16% had already decided on a successor, 13% planned to sell the business, while 10% planned to close it down. Last year our survey showed that 19% of respondents intended to sell or transfer the business in the future.
We estimate that family firms account for 85% of the private sector enterprises in the economy. The vast majority of family enterprises are small and medium enterprises (SMEs). 56%are sole traders with no employees. We also estimate there to be over half the firms with over 250 employees are also family owned. These alone account for 20% of the turnover of the overall family business sector.
Because family enterprises are more likely to be small firms, they account for a lower share of turnover, employment and GDP than of the total number of firms in the economy – but the share is still substantial. Family enterprises produce around 45% of turnover in the private sector. We estimate that they also account for around 40% of GDP in the private sector and 38% of GDP in the overall economy.
Their share of employment is slightly higher, given that small firms tend to employ more people per unit of output than large firms. We estimate that family businesses account for around 45% of private sector employment, providing employment to 60,000. The contribution of the family business sector to the economy extends beyond its direct contribution to output; it also acts as a crucial breeding ground for entrepreneurial talent and start-ups. Furthermore, we estimate that family businesses pay around 25% of the Government's total tax receipts. If we include taxes paid by employees of family firms, this raises the contribution to tax revenues 35% of the total.
Meanwhile, there are good reasons for family firms to be more profitable and stable than other firms. Perhaps the biggest advantage lies in aligning the interests of managers and owners. Family firms also tend to have a longer time-horizon than other firms.
The business and tax environment has generally been supportive of family business. However, further progress could be made in the development of a more favourable tax regime through extending the scope of business property relief and protection of business asset holdover relief. Measures to improve the succession rate of family firms when it comes to passing the firm on from the current generation are also needed.
Close Family |
57% |
Other Relatives/Extended Family |
38% |
Work Colleagues |
20% |
Individual investors not previously known |
2% |
Bank |
72% |
Government Schemes |
20% |
And other sources |
10% |
|
217 |
Government programmes are used less by family firms and family businesses – do not feel government is interested in financing family businesses.
Problems Could….
Do these disadvantages outweigh the advantages?
Let's say research shows that family businesses do at least as well as non-family businesses. But there is evidence that family businesses perform better: a study in the 1990's conducted by the London Business School showed that over a 20 year period family controlled businesses on the stock exchange outperformed the overall index by nearly 30%. A survey by Thomson Financial in 2005 showed that family firms outperformed across Europe. The Manchester Business School Family Business Index of publicly quoted family firms, outperformed the FTSE All Share by 40% over 1995 to 2005.
One particular issue that is bothering many families as many who went into business as the Maltese economy leaped forward during the seventies is that of succession. Many business owners are ageing and the issue is greater as their sons or daughters moved to other professions or opened their own, different lines of business.
Only one third of family owned businesses survive the transition to the second generation.
And of these businesses again only one third will survive to the third generation, meaning that the chances your grandchildren will take over your business are about 1 in 10.
Reasons:
For most business owners their business is their single largest asset in terms of value, but it also represents a major source of self-esteem and personal worth. Many owners simply don't want to think about the day when they will no longer be running the business. The fear of retirement pushes succession to a question of the owner's death.
Our essential issue: how to pick our child to succeed while being fair to others.
This is an important issue (BDO Dunwoody: Succession Planning For Family Business)
Planning process:
Succession planning leads to another important problem that needs to be resolved: estate planning as you need to ensure that the steps you take do not have a negative effect on your succession plan.
Issues Raised by GRTU Founders 60 Years Ago
Issues:
The Malta Chamber of SMEs represents over 7,000 members from over 90 different sectors which in their majority are either small or medium sized companies, and such issues like the one we're experiencing right now, it's important to be united. Malta Chamber of SMEs offers a number of different services tailored to its members' individual requirements' and necessities. These range from general services offered to all members to more individual & bespoke services catered for specific requirements.
A membership with Malta Chamber of SMEs will guarantee that you are constantly updated and informed with different opportunities which will directly benefit your business and help you grow. It also entails you to a number of services which in their majority are free of charge and offered exclusively to its members (in their majority all free of charge).