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Dublin: 13 °C Saturday 25 May, 2013

Government announces €450m Credit Guarantee Scheme

The new scheme is expected to benefit 5,600 businesses and support the creation of 4,000 jobs over three years by providing an €150million in lending for small businesses per year

Image: Laura Hutton/Photocall

THE GOVERNMENT HAS announced its latest progress report on its Action Plan for Jobs, which it says will benefit 5,600 businesses and support the creation of 4,000 jobs over the next three years.

The scheme, to be launched next Wednesday, aims to provide credit to small and medium businesses. It will provide an extra €150 million in lending to such firms by 2016.

The scheme is intended to address market failure affecting commercially viable businesses in two specific situations – specifically, where businesses have insufficient collateral and where businesses operate in sectors with which the banks are not familiar. It will provide a 75 per cent state guarantee to banks against losses to banks against losses on qualifying loans to firms with growth and job creation potential.

The Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation Richard Bruton said that for every €150 million of additional lending, more than 1,800 businesses will be benefited and more than 1,300 jobs will be created.

The Government said the cost of the scheme per €150 million of lending is €6.38 million – but noted that this does not take into account benefits to the Exchequer this lending will bring in terms of increased tax receipts and decreased social welfare payments. When such benefits are taken into account, it says, the net gain to the Exchequer is over €25 million per €150 million of lending – which represents a 400 per cent return on the State’s investment.

Bruton said 58 out of 67 measures in the Action Plan, published last February, had been delivered in the third quarter of this year.

“I am delighted that the Credit Guarantee Scheme is being launched this morning. The Government recognises that the small business sector will be essential to our mission of getting Ireland working again. Alongside the recently launched Microfinance Scheme, the work through the Credit Review Office and directly with the Banks, the Scheme is part of the suite of measures the Government is undertaking to improve access to finance for small businesses,” the Taoiseach said.

Read: Bruton rolls out programme to help small businesses>

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Comments (12 Comments)

  • OU812 17/10/12 #

    Erm…. Weren’t the banks supposed to do this as part of their bailout conditions?

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  • We will see how it goes . My fear would be that to qualify for this credit you would need to prove first that you don’t need it …

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    • Which in a way is what prudent banking is all about. To quote Mark Twain “a banker is the type of fellow who lends you his umbrella and then asks for it back when it starts raining”.

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  • It’s a good start Mr Bruton, the country needs more of this, get you finger out.

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  • It all sounds great in theory, however he states that 58 of 67 measures to create jobs have been implemented. That being the case, then the fact that unemployment levels are still as high as ever, plainly shows that those measures haven’t made one bit if differences.

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    • Maybe some firms have been kept open by the measures. It would be great to see some net job growth. Maybe we should be closing the deficit gap more slowly.

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    • In all fairness it would take years for even the best measures to have effect on employment, even in a favourable global economy.

      One thing that I want to see is SME’s being the focus of the Govt. They provide 90% of private jobs, they are the backbone of this economy. Not Multi’s, which are important but not the engine of our economy.

      SME’s might not have flash job launches or attend dinners and golf occasions but our future success or failure rests solely with them.

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  • Finally , this has been announced before , there were stories and press releases last April , then again in July , the IMF actually thought we already had introduced this , so surprise surprise guess who’s in town this week and hey presto , finally it’s announced , hate to sound cynical but we are constantly told ” the banks are lending” when all the evidence from SME sector is the contrary , hopefully this will be actually done as opposed to announced , and the badly needed money can be used fund small business as promised .

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  • useless. Banks are supposed to do this.

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  • Yeah great idea. I mean the Irish state has such a stellar reputation in its recent past playing at being a banker. What could possibly go wrong?

    *sits back and waits for next scandal about a FG donor qualifying for umpteen loans*

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