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Calls For Greater Transparency On Performance of Coronavirus Economic Support Schemes

Posted 4 years ago

Calls For Greater Transparency On Performance of Coronavirus Economic Support Schemes
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Author: Sacha Bright & Oliver Murphy

The Labour Party has called for what it calls “much greater transparency” on the implementation of and effectiveness of the government’s schemes to support the economy and jobs during the coronavirus outbreak.

Labour Leader Keir Starmer and Shadow Chancellor Anneliese Dodds have demanded daily updates and the publication of figures on the performance of each of the government’s coronavirus schemes to ensure that these measures are implemented effectively and deliver support to all businesses and people who need it.

Today’s announcement comes as CityAM revealed that out of the 309,000 CBILS applications, only 2,022 worth a combined value of 291.9m, have been approved. This represents an approval rate of just 0.65% - down from 0.73% when the scheme launched - an average loan size of £144,362 and less than 10% of the scheme funds.

Labour has requested specific figures ranging from the number of applications for loans issued under the CBILS to the number of claims received for furloughed employees and grants made under the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme.

The request for greater transparency comes amid growing concerns about the implementation and performance of the Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme.

Responding to Labour’s call for greater transparency, Martin McTague, Advocacy Chair at the Federation of Small Business said: “A huge number of small businesses are struggling right now - transparency on how well the various government schemes are working is essential. 

He added: “It is vital to make sure small businesses can stay afloat so that those who are furloughed have jobs to come back to when all this is over.”

NextFin has reported that despite forming a major part of the UK economy, up to 2 million small limited companies could be excluded for the government's Job Retention Scheme, while in early April, the Institute of Directors (IoD), not one of its 30,000 affiliated companies have managed to secure one of the government-backed bank loans announced by Chancellor Rishi Sunak.

A similar Swiss government support scheme distributed 28 times more cash in its first week than the UK scheme achieved in three weeks, with the Swiss scheme requiring a simple 1-page form compared to the lengthy underwriting process required in the UK.

New figures show that only 4,200 loans had been approved before the Easter weekend despite over 300,000 inquiries. The government has been forced to redesign its Business Interruption Loan scheme after a flaw which saw firms first having to apply for commercial loans first.

In a statement, Sir Keir Starmer said: “It is vitally important that the coronavirus economic schemes are effective so that we can protect people’s incomes, jobs and businesses and prevent a deeper and longer-lasting recession.

Labour’s Shadow Chancellor Anneliese Dodds said: “The patchy uptake and implementation of the Coronavirus Businesses Interruption Loan Scheme has left too many businesses waiting or without any support at all.”

As well as greater transparency, NextFin has called upon the government to embrace alternative finance, such as the extension of the CBILS to P2P lenders, as a way to protect small businesses.

Responding to the call for transparency, Sacha Bright, CEO of NextFin said: “We welcome Labour’s interventions. However, we would like to see them actively pushing the use of alternative finance methods, such as P2P lenders being included in the government’s CBILS, the increase of the SEIS and EIS to stimulate private investment in start-ups and a 100% government-backed loan guarantee for small businesses. 

This would have an immediate positive effect on the economy. The Labour Party needs to push for progressive solutions, rather than simply contributing to a debate that we do not have time for.”



Disclaimer

To the best of our knowledge, the information we have provided is correct at the time of publishing. Sacha Bright is not a solicitor or accountant and we recommend that you seek professional legal advice on any topic discussed.

Tagged: News P2P EIS SEIS



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