Prompt payment

Prompt payment is a commercial discipline which requires businesses to:

It is the opposite of late payment, to which the European Union's Late Payments Directive and the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 in the United Kingdom are directed. Prompt payment may also be contrasted with excessively long or grossly unfair payment terms, such as payment terms in excess of 60 days, even where such terms are honoured by the business making payment.

In the UK, businesses are encouraged to sign the Prompt Payment Code[1] to testify to their commitment to adopting a prompt payment culture. As at 22 March 2015, 1824 businesses had signed the code. The Code is hosted and administered for UK government by the Chartered Institute of Credit Management. The UK Government issued a consultation document in February 2015[2] aimed at 'challenging grossly unfair payment terms' and 'strengthening the Prompt Payment Code, and the Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Bill[3] made further provision to 'improve prompt payment reporting'. The UK government also introduced proposals in the 2015 Enterprise Bill to penalise delayed payment of insurance claims.[4]

In the United States, prompt payment of federal government supplier debts is enshrined in Title 31 of the United States Code, chapter 39 being known as the 'Prompt Payment Act'. The California Legislature has implemented a comprehensive series of laws known as the 'prompt payment statutes'.

References

Chartered Institute of Credit Management website

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, February 10, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.