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PRIVACY
Opinion

Flexible funding shows how far Development Bank of Wales has come - Dylan Jones-Evans

Last week the Welsh Government’s Economy minister announced the Bank would have discretion within its £167m Wales Flexible Investment Fund to extend the loan periods

Economy minister Ken Skates leads the Welsh Government press briefing(Image: Welsh Government)

When I conducted the Access to Finance review for the Welsh Government seven years ago, it was the affordability of the repayment of a loan, rather than the cost of borrowing, that was cited in interviews with banks, intermediaries and small businesses as being the main obstacles to accessing bank finance.

From discussions with the banks at the time, it was clear that more stringent rules regarding credit availability has reduced the terms of loans and the affordability to many businesses.

This was also the conclusion of a major review of the Royal Bank of Scotland’s lending to small firms which found that whilst the average contractual term for commercial banking loans was approximately nine years for accounts opened in 2008, this had been shortened to approximately five years in 2009 and had largely continued at that level since for most accounts.

In addition, the Banking Taskforce Appeals Process Review showed that for bank lending above £25,000, affordability (48%) was the key reason for banks declining loan application by businesses.

Given this, one of the recommendations that we made for the creation of a new Development Bank of Wales following the review was for the new body to improve the affordability of debt finance for SMEs as compared to its predecessor Finance Wales, which had limited loans to a maximum of five years in the same way as high street banks at the time.

Whilst there was some resistance at the time to such a change, we were encouraged by the example of another public funding body, namely the Strategic Banking Corporation of Ireland (SBCI), which was established to intervene to support SME lending.

In particular, the SBCI has focused on facilitating the delivery of lower cost, innovative and accessible funding to Irish SMEs through a suite of flexible products offered by a wider range of financial institutions than is currently available in the Irish market. Most important of all, this would include working capital and capital investment finance with longer maturities of up to 10 years to repay the loan and payment flexibility for SMEs.

So why would a firm want to do that?