Malta Chamber of SMEs presents 19 proposals for a Covid 19 Budget year

“SME Chamber calls for a Budget of strength to sustain businesses through the Covid crises and beyond.”

Photo: timesofmalta.com

 

The Malta Chamber of SMEs has published its full set of 19 Budget proposals that mainly focus on the required urgent response mechanism to counter the effects of the Covid 19 pandemic on businesses.

In his foreword, the SME Chamber President Paul Abela states that 2020 is nothing like what anyone expected and will be remembered as an exceptional year for all the wrong reasons. Mr Abela also explained that businesses had hoped for greater stability in 2020, after Malta had gone through very turbulent months at the end of 2019 and later saw the election of Dr Robert Abela as Prime Minister. Unfortunately, Covid 19 did quite the opposite. 

Lack of confidence, lack of stability and great uncertainty have been with us for close to a year now when considering also the political instability that we closed 2019 with. Businesses have been hit very hard and Malta is still not rid of Covid and will not be for some more time. Budget 2021 must guarantee a financial package that will see businesses through the Covid period and help them rebuild their strength to be able to sustain the Maltese Economy independently again.  

 

Below are the highlights of the set of proposals being put forward by the Malta Chamber of SMEs: 

REDUCTION OF INCOME TAX ON BUSINESS TRADING INCOME

To 20% for the first Eur 100,000 in profits, to leave increased liquidity in the pockets of businesses 

 

LOWERING THE VAT RATES ACROSS THE BOARD

10% from the current 18% and extending the special VAT rates for businesses that have been hardest hit by the pandemic. Similar to what other countries have done, lower VAT rates will encourage increased consumption 

 

REMOVAL OF SISA

An unfair and hidden tax on consumption. SISA removed for all goods that do not carry the excise identifying marker 

 

COVID WAGE SUPPLEMENT

Extended till March 2021 to give businesses pradicability 

Reintegrating a number of business sectors on the original wage supplement 

Give the possibility to employers to integrate critical staff in the Wage Supplement system to replace employees that have left and not made redundant 

 

RELAUNCHING THE VOUCHER SCHEME

Redistribution of another round of Eur100 vouchers 

 

INCREASED BANKING SUPPORT  

Extending the moratoria on bank repayments for an additional 6 months in the form of a partial moratorium 

Interest rate subsidy of 2.5% to be extended to all loans linked to new investments 

 

NEW EMPLOYMENT AND TRAINING SCHEMES

A full financed training scheme that will incentivise the business to keep employees on and rather than staying unproductive 

A re-employment grant scheme where employers that employ someone who has over the last months been made redundant due to Covid would be assisted by covering Eur 500/month of the wage for one year 

Strengthen the Get Qualified scheme to encourage personal development 

 

E-COMMERCE SUPPORT SCHEMES

A grant scheme that would help businesses cover costs linked to the successful execution of a website which are beyond the cost of building a website per se 

 

EXTENDING MICROINVEST BENEFITS 

Extending the cash conversion possibility of MicroInvest from 30% to 50% up to a maximum of  Eur 5000 insteatd of Eur 2000  

Extend eligible costs covered by MicroInvest to cover Covid consumables such as disposable and reusable masks, disinfection and fumigation services and sanitizers 

 

NO BUSINESS SUCCESSION TAX ON CAUSA MORTIS

 When a business stays within the immediate family.

 

IMPROVING THE ACCESSIBILITY TO AND WITHIN GOZO IN A SUSTAINABLE MANNER TO PRESERVE GOZO’S PRISTINE NATURE

 

The SME Chamber’s Budget 2021 targets businesses and consumers alike, who depend on each other now, with the effects of Covid, more than ever. 

We thank the Prime Minister for his support and cooperation during this difficult year as the state support measures were crucial to avoid mass business closures and unemployment.

A budget and economic mismatch for SMEs

Even though this year’s budget had a number of somewhat positive points, the GRTU had expected     much more for Small Businesses (SMEs).

GRTU does not feel that businesses should be grateful for no increase in taxes. Businesses were one of the main contributors that generated the economic growth and surplus we are enjoying today. This time, they were also the ones left out from government’s wealth distribution plans. In the current economic scenario, GRTU had expected a reduction in corporate taxation and the reversal of the harmful excise tax, amongst other things.

GRTU welcomes positive incentives such as the extension of the MicroInvest scheme and commitments to further reduce bureaucracy as well as the increased enforcement to ensure a level playing field. These are measures that have now become commonplace in every year’s budget. One will need to see what these will actually and tangibly result in.

We appreciate that the environment is high on government’s agenda, which is positive. This must however be accompanied by proper consultation in order to foster the right synergies with the private sector.

It appears that the government is taking our positive GDP trends for granted with no new incentives to continue stimulating the economy. GRTU is surprised that out of the 13 proposals it presented none have been adequately addressed.

GRTU is amongst others alarmed that the biggest challenge facing businesses today, the lack of human resources, was not even given a mention in this year’s budget.

This budget is populated by numerous minor proposals, none having the aggressive approach we desired to address specific issues. A case in point is traffic congestion with pages explaining minute solutions and nothing strong enough to really make a difference.