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PRIVACY
Opinion

Starts-ups and non-VAT registered firms in Wales might now get the support they so desperately need

Economy Minister Ken Skates said that support for new firms is now a priority

Ken Skates, Minister for Economy and Transport, and Minister for North Wales(Image: Ian Cooper/North Wales Live)

They say a week is a long time in politics and the last seven days has certainly demonstrated that old adage remains true.

Last week, I again made the case in this column that those entrepreneurs who had started new firms in Wales in 2019 and 2020 would not be supported by the Welsh and º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Governments’ interventions to support businesses during Covid 19 and needed help urgently.

Simply put, this meant that at a º£½ÇÊÓÆµ level, 12,000 Welsh startups would not get a Covid-19 self-employed grant as are clearly unable to provide self-assessment data for 2018-19 nor would they be able to get a business rates grant as most do not have premises and either sub-lease or work from home.

In Wales, the fact that they are less than two years old and with the vast majority not VAT registered, those start-ups based in Wales cannot get access to the £500m Economic Resilience Fund announced by the Welsh Government including the new £100m loan programme from the Development Bank of Wales.

The response to this gap in funding by the Welsh Government was a statement that they cannot support every firm in Wales, despite the promise at the beginning of this crisis that “if you had a good business in 2019, you will have a good business in 2021”.

Despite £1.4bn of business support being made available, the mantra from Cardiff Bay last week was that it was up to º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government to fill the gap for startups in Wales and that a new programme of support was imminent after pressure from tech entrepreneurs in London.

And as if on cue, the Chancellor of the Exchequer announced a £1.25bn package of support on Monday for start-ups that would help the sector.

Unfortunately, this proved too good to be true as the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Treasury definition of start-ups seemed to be based on those tech firms which had been funded by equity, excluding the vast majority of new businesses in Wales.