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IoD press release  Business leaders’ confidence in economic outlook remains fragile

The IoD Directors’ Economic Confidence Index, which measures business leader optimism over prospects for the UK economy, dropped back to -63 in February 2026 from -48 in January.

Business leader confidence in their own organisations also fell, to +1 in February from +14 in January.

There were also declines in many of the underlying indicators:

  • Revenue expectations fell to +15 in February from +23 in January
  • Headcount expectations fell to -11 from -2
  • Export expectations fell to +5 from +11

Other measures were relatively stable:

  • Cost expectations rose to +84 from +81
  • Wage expectations remained the same at +45
  • Investment intentions remained the same at -6

Of the factors having a negative impact on businesses (asked quarterly):

  • UK economic conditions (77%) remain the most significant concern, unchanged from November 2025
  • Employment taxes (63%) and business taxes (54%) continue to be of significant concern, up from 60% and 50% respectively
  • Levels of concern about compliance with government regulation (45%) rose for the third quarter running (from 37% in November and 32% in August 2025)

Of the global risks that are most concerning for business leaders (asked quarterly):

  • Geopolitical tensions (52%, up from 48% in November) has overtaken global economic slowdown (52%, from 59%) as the highest risk factor
  • Concern about the US administration has jumped to 39% from 29%
  • Concern about cybersecurity has dropped to 49% from 58% and back into third place from second

Anna Leach, Chief Economist at the Institute of Directors, said:

 “After a welcome recovery in last month’s data, confidence amongst business leaders has ticked down again this month. Revenue and headcount growth expectations have softened while cost expectations have risen, as business leaders continue to grapple with pressures from ongoing rises in employment costs. Taxes and regulatory compliance remain prominent concerns, and a timely reminder of the importance of the government’s deregulatory agenda and the crucial need for business-friendly tax reform. Meanwhile the latest tariff developments have undoubtedly contributed to geopolitical tensions jumping up the risk agenda in board rooms.

“As we approach the Spring Statement, the quietness of the newsflow around policy announcements has provided some welcome stability. But the need for swifter delivery of growth-friendly policies is increasingly urgent. UK businesses face intense pressures: rising costs, worsening late payments, persistent pricing pressures. As we move through the year, momentum on planning reform, defence spending and industrial strategy will be critical. Above all, firms need a coherent growth strategy that clearly sets out priorities and trade-offs — providing the clarity and certainty required to anchor confidence.”

The IoD Directors’ Economic Confidence Index measures the net % positive answers from members of the Institute of Directors to the question ‘How optimistic are you about the wider UK economy over the next 12 months?’ on a five-point scale from ‘very optimistic’ to ‘very pessimistic’.

545 responses from across the UK, conducted between 13-26 February 2026. 15% ran large businesses (250+ people), 20% medium (50-249), 25% small (10-49 people), 29% micro (2-9 people) and 10% sole trader and self-employed business entities (0-1 people).

How optimistic are you about both the wider UK economy and also your organisation over the next 12 months?

Very optimistic
Quite optimistic
Neither optimistic nor pessimistic
Quite pessimistic
Very pessimistic
Don't know
Wider UK economy
1.3%
8.3%
17.4%
45.9%
27.2%
0.0%
Your (primary) organisation
4.4%
29.9%
32.1%
25.5%
7.5%
0.6%

Comparing the next 12 months with the last 12 months, what do you believe the outlook for your organisation will be in terms of:

Much higher
Somewhat higher
No change
Somewhat lower
Much lower
N/A
Don't know
Business investment
3.5%
22.6%
40.6%
21.1%
10.8%
0.9%
0.6%
Costs
19.8%
67.9%
7.9%
2.9%
0.6%
0.4%
Exports
2.2%
14.1%
30.5%
7.7%
3.5%
40.6%
1.5%
Headcount
1.5%
20.0%
44.2%
25.0%
7.5%
0.9%
0.9%
Revenue
4.4%
39.3%
26.8%
22.2%
6.1%
0.9%
0.4%
Wages
6.1%
49.9%
31.2%
7.7%
2.9%
1.5%
0.7%

Which of the following, if any, are having a negative impact on your organisation?

UK economic conditions
77.6%
Employment taxes
62.6%
Business taxes
53.9%
Compliance with government regulation
45.3%
Cost of energy
34.5%
Skills shortages and/or labour shortages
33.0%
Global economic conditions
32.8%
Trading relationship with the EU
20.4%
Difficulty or delays obtaining payment from customers
18.5%
Cost/availability of finance
17.1%
Transport cost/speed/reliability
12.8%
Supply chain disruption
9.7%
Broadband cost/speed/reliability
8.4%
None
1.7%

Which of the following global risks are the most concerning for your business? Please choose up to three

Geopolitical tensions
51.9%
Global economic slowdown
51.7%
Cyber security risks
48.8%
The US administration
38.9%
Misuse of artificial intelligence
31.6%
Global trade war
23.5%
Extreme weather events
9.7%
Global health risks
6.6%
None
5.0%
Don't know
0.6%

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