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Post an EU jobUp to 200,000 corporate insolvencies are expected in Europe this year, according to the European Commission's SME envoy, Françoise Le Bail, who said the reluctance of banks to lend to SMEs will force thousands of viable companies out of business.
The European Commission has said the economic crisis hit SMEs after having struck larger enterprises, but smaller firms are now suffering badly. A major cause of difficulty for businesses is reduced access to credit, as banks have been less inclined to extend loans in recent months.
To combat this, the European Investment Bank has ramped up its support for SMEs and will make €30 billion available over the next three years. There have been complaints that the funds have been slow to reach SMEs, but the Bank and the Commission now insist that the infrastructure is in place to distribute the loans.
Criticism that more was being done to bail out larger companies without comparable support for SMEs has been dismissed by European Commission SME Envoy Françoise Le Bail.
Meanwhile, efforts are ongoing to ease the administrative burden for SMEs by implementing the Small Business Act, which was introduced last June.
Speaking at last week's European Business Summit in Brussels, where she addressed a workshop entitled 'SMEs in times of crisis: red tape or red carpet?,' she said 19 EU member states had already launched recovery packages for the real economy which will directly benefit small companies.
Le Bail said the Commission was in the process of implementing the Small Business Act, which will help make life easier for smaller businesses by cutting red tape. This will include amendments to the Late Payments Directive which could be unveiled as early as this week.
The changes are expected to recommend that public authorities pay private firms within 30 days.
Arndt Kirchhoff, chair of the
BusinessEurope
's SME committee, said the revamped directive is badly needed to inject cash into the system and keep companies in business, adding that the credit crunch will ruin thousands of sound companies.
"Adequate access to finance must be secured to stop viable SMEs going bankrupt. The rapid adoption of the Late Payments Directive is essential as governments are delaying the release of money and this is making matters even worse," he said.
Kirchhoff said the Small Business Act has good answers to many of the problems facing SMEs, but its implementation is crucial if companies are to feel its impact quickly.
Valia Chilova, managing partner at marketing consultancy company
Marketor
and a candidate in the forthcoming Bulgarian national elections, described SMEs as "the blood of the economy," but said the government in her country has failed to adopt around half of the measures proposed by business organisations.
She was also critical of what she described as a lack of information on the precise impact of the crisis and the slow pace of response from politicians. "Up to the end of last year, we were told there would be no crisis in Bulgaria, that we were in a strong position, which turned out not to be the case. Over the past four or five years, more than €30 billion in foreign direct investment has entered Bulgaria, but it was invested in the construction sector, and now there is no cash in the market."
Chilova added that EU funds are no longer flowing to Bulgaria, and SMEs in South Eastern Europe face particular difficulties in attracting investors due to a lack of trust.
Luuk Borg, director of the secretariat of
EUREKA
, a pan-European network for R&D, said the ongoing crisis is not the only reason to tackle bureaucracy, and all administrators have an obligation to cut red tape. However, he said some procedures are necessary in order to guarantee that public money is spent properly.
Borg said the Commission has been working to deal with bureaucracy and to make R&D more accessible to SMEs. "However, a high success rate for applications is important. You cannot ask people in small companies to spend time and money on research applications if only 8% of them will ultimately be successful," he said.
The session was moderated by the founder and publisher of EurActiv.com , Christophe Leclercq, who noted that SMEs as well as EU representatives are calling for changes in public policy to address the ongoing crisis.
"Typically, businesses fight against intervention but now they are engaging with policymakers. This could lay the groundwork for a greater consensus of what public policy should be," he said.