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Malta Business Review<br />

INVEST<br />

Supporting a Future Entrepreneurial Malta<br />

Parliamentary Secretary for EU Funds and Social Dialogue Aaron Farrugia add<strong>res</strong>sed a seminar on the EU-funded INVEST project, with<br />

the topic of financial and forecasting models for entrepreneurs. The opening add<strong>res</strong>s was delivered by the Minister for Education and<br />

Employment Evarist Bartolo.<br />

Farrugia explained how the Government<br />

is acting as a platform to support a future<br />

entrepreneurial Malta, ready to drive the<br />

country’s digital transformation in a world of<br />

hyper-innovation.<br />

Add<strong>res</strong>sing an audience of entrepreneurs,<br />

Farrugia spoke of the importance of<br />

entrepreneurship as it creates new companies,<br />

opens up new markets and nurtu<strong>res</strong> new skills,<br />

and is therefore a vital driving force for job<br />

creation and economic growth. He recalled<br />

that since joining the European Union in 2004,<br />

Malta has worked hard to capitalise on the<br />

funding opportunities provided to the member<br />

states – particularly in regards to structural and<br />

cohesion funds.<br />

Enterprises are being supported through EU<br />

funds when undertaking investment projects<br />

aimed at securing sustainable business growth,<br />

by becoming more competitive, innovative<br />

and more <strong>res</strong>ilient to market challenges.<br />

The Parliamentary Secretary explained how<br />

EU-funded projects have contributed to the<br />

economic and financial sustainability of Malta’s<br />

fast-growing economy. “Whether it is through<br />

the €30 million we are investing in SMEs, the<br />

€20 million we are investing in <strong>res</strong>earch and<br />

development, the Kappara and Marsa Junction,<br />

financial instruments in loans and guarantees<br />

or the ESF funds for the <strong>res</strong>killing and upskilling<br />

of our workforce, they all contribute to Malta’s<br />

economic growth. For the next EU budget post-<br />

2020, we are planning for these programmes to<br />

be simplified and flexible,” he said.<br />

The Business Enhance Schemes, which are<br />

part-financed by the European Regional<br />

Development Fund 2014-2020, seek to support<br />

enterprises, mainly SMEs and start-ups, through<br />

the provision of a non-repayable grants. The<br />

scheme includes the Start-Up Invest Grant<br />

Scheme with a maximum grant of €300,000; the<br />

SME Growth Grant Scheme with a maximum<br />

grant of €500,000; SME Diversification and<br />

Innovation Grant Scheme having a maximum<br />

grant of €200,000; SME Internationalisation<br />

Grant Scheme having a maximum grant of<br />

€10,000; e-Commerce Grant Scheme having<br />

a maximum grant of €5,000; and the SME<br />

Consultancy Services Grant Scheme having a<br />

maximum grant of €4,000.<br />

So far, 145 SMEs have already benefitted from<br />

funds under the 2014-2020 programme. A total<br />

of €51 million have been allocated towards<br />

providing financial assistance to SMEs. An<br />

agreement was also recently signed with the<br />

EIB group and the European Commission to<br />

increase financing available under the SME<br />

Initiative in Malta.<br />

The initial SME Initiative in Malta has al<strong>low</strong>ed<br />

the Bank of Valletta and BNF Bank to deliver<br />

approximately €60 million of new SME financing<br />

across the country within less than three years.<br />

“Due to the successful uptake of this initial<br />

agreement, we, together with the EIB Group and<br />

the EC have decided to add additional <strong>res</strong>ources<br />

to this initiative. This increase will trigger<br />

additional SMEs financing for an amount of €28<br />

million, <strong>res</strong>ulting in more SMEs benefiting from<br />

European <strong>res</strong>ources on advantageous terms,<br />

such as reduced inte<strong>res</strong>t rates and improved<br />

collateral requirements, bringing the total SME<br />

financing to around €90 million,” Farrugia said.<br />

Other EU-funded opportunities include the<br />

Erasmus for Young Entrepreneurs, a crossborder<br />

exchange programme which enables<br />

aspiring young entrepreneurs to learn from<br />

entrepreneurs with experience, as well as The<br />

Youth Employment Initiative, which supports<br />

unemployed young people who are currently<br />

not enrolled in education or training in regions<br />

with a youth unemployment rate above 25%.<br />

The Youth Guarantee is a guarantee made<br />

to unemployed people under 25 — whether<br />

registered with job-search services or not —<br />

that they will get a good-quality, specific offer<br />

of work within four months of leaving formal<br />

education or becoming unemployed.<br />

"A total of €51 million<br />

have been allocated<br />

towards providing<br />

financial assistance to<br />

SMEs<br />

Aaron Farrugia, Parliamentary Secretary for EU Funds<br />

Similarly, the Interreg projects are EU-funded<br />

programmes for territorial cooperation through<br />

which Maltese entities get to learn from our<br />

European counterparts and become aware of<br />

best practices, which are then implemented<br />

locally. “Such projects are also excellent<br />

platforms for building relationships with our<br />

foreign colleagues, whilst learning in the<br />

process and passing on some of our ideas and<br />

experiences too. The outcome of these projects<br />

or their pilot-actions, feed in national policy<br />

papers or even serve as an important baseline<br />

for larger projects financed through other EU<br />

sources or national funds,” Farrugia said.<br />

With Brexit leaving a €13 billion gap in the EU<br />

budget, and issues of migration, defence and<br />

security being given priority, Malta`s private<br />

sector should do more and better to tap into<br />

centralised EU funds. In this regard, Farrugia<br />

referred to an action plan announced last<br />

month through which Malta can make better<br />

use of funds from direct EU funds after 2020 –<br />

such as Horizon 2020, Life+ and creative Europe,<br />

amongst others, through the setting up of a<br />

new division focussed solely on this, which will<br />

fall under the division for programme funding.<br />

Challenges remain, as the November 2017 EU<br />

report 'SME Performance Review' outlines<br />

that newly founded entities ‘created by selfemployed<br />

have survival rates typically between<br />

30-60 % after the first five years, and Microentrepreneurs<br />

are disadvantaged compared to<br />

Larger Enterprises.<br />

“Let’s face these challenges while consolidating<br />

this p<strong>res</strong>ent regulation and taxation system that<br />

nurtu<strong>res</strong> champions. A system that fosters capital<br />

investment and encourages entrepreneurs and<br />

investors to finance this current productive<br />

economy,” Farrugia said. <strong>MBR</strong><br />

Creditline: Parliamentary Secretary for EU Funds<br />

and Social Dialogue/DOI<br />

38

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