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PRIVACY
Enterprise

Start up loan programme from the British Business Bank exceeds £1bn of lending

Since launching the fund in 2012 Welsh start-up firms have received £46m of funding

The British Business Bank has exceeded the £1bn mark for its flagship debt programme backing start-up businesses.

The economic regeneration bank of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government, which has a º£½ÇÊÓÆµ-wide funding remit, launched its Start Up Loans initiative in 2012. Since then its providing just over £1bn in loans, providing up to £25,000 with a current fix rate of 6%, to more than 105,000 nascent firms.

Welsh businesses have received more than £46m through 4,500 loans with an average amount of £10,000 - slightly higher than the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ average of £9,547.

On a local authority basis the biggest recipients to date are Swansea (£5.9m), Cardiff (£5.4m), Newport (£2.9m), Carmarthenshire (£2.8m), and Caerphilly (£2.8m).

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ-wide £201m (20%) of the £1bn has been lent to people from black, Asian and other ethnic minority backgrounds.

Just 4% of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s small businesses in 2021 were majority-led by people from an ethnic minority group and only 20% of new businesses had female founders according to The Rose Review. The British Business Bank said its Start Up Loans programme provides a means of reaching under-represented groups who are excluded from mainstream finance by helping them start businesses.

In Wales, recent figures show that less than 3% of small businesses are majority-led by people from an ethnic minority group and of the £45m delivered in loans to Welsh businesses, more than £4m (8%) has been lent to people from black, Asian and other ethnic minority backgrounds (not including white minorities).

The data also reports that across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, £371m (40%) has been lent to female business owners.