Press Release: Positive outcome for Black Friday 2024
29 November 2024
Feedback reported to the Malta Chamber of SMEs on Black Friday results indicates mixed outcomes....
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Opening
President of GRTUMalta Chamber of Small 20th October 2004
It is my pleasure as President
of GRTU to welcome you to this conference and to wish you all a good day. GRTU is particularly happy to have been given this great opportunity by UEAPME to organise this special SME development session.GRTU has for the last 55 years striven to send one important message to the authorities: small businesses matter; they are extremely important for any country most of all for small economies striving to catch up with larger richer ones; small business are the backbone of the modern market economy. Our message today is everyone’s message; if only from words the authorities could move to deeds. Progress has been registered in Malta as in the rest of Europe and UEAPME deserves great praise for its consistent efforts to cause the European bureaucratic systems, including the European Commission, to move in a strategic manner towards the assistance of SME development. The Lisbon Agenda gives loads of importance to SME's; but are we really there? Are we any close to achieve the targets so ambitiously set? Romano Prodi ex-president of the commission is sceptical. We are even more so. But the efforts are there. Many people and institutions are working hard to ensure that more of the words in favour of SME support are turned to deeds. In Malta we still have a long way to go even though Malta is essentially an SME economy. Unfortunately we cannot report much progress. We have worked hard together with the other organisations representing business to establish Malta Enterprise as a focal point organisation in support of SME’s. But even Malta Enterprise is facing difficult times. The Budget cutting imposed by the economic realities Malta is facing today with a stagnant GDP growth has also been imposed on Malta Enterprise. We all want to move forward, we all want to grab the opportunities that the enlarged internal EU Market is offering, and yet somehow we are failing.We will hear the Prime Minister of Malta Dr Lawrence Gonzi, who I have great honour to welcome among us today give us his government’s view as to what should and will be done to give Maltese entrepreneurs the means to implement the projects and investments they are ready to unleash. Our Director General, Vincent Farrugia who was instrumental in getting this Conference organised as the first of a serious of 60 Conferences on Future Access to Finance to SME's that will be organised throughout the EU, will this afternoon give us the result of the survey conducted among Maltese SME's. Rather than us, it will be they speaking through us, Throughout the day we will be hearing expert presentations related to the main theme Basil II the Future of Access to Finance for SME’s. From Malta, besides Prof. Joe Bannister whom you have already heard, you will have excellent presentations from Karol Gabaretta and Catherine Galea from MFSA. The Chairman of Bank of Valletta, Mr Joe FX Zahra will talk to us on Credit Rating and Risk Assessment in favour of access to finance for SME’s.Our International guests Gerhard Huemer from UEAPME and Christian Marlier from Fortis Bank will give us the basic turnouts of the reform inherent in Basil II, while Ian Jakeways will present us with an excellent Toolkit that should give us a splendid instrument for SME owners and managers in pursuit of access to finance.The Conference should leave you all with positive gain to you personally and to your firms. You will have ample time to ask and discuss and we will be happy to receive your comments during the conference and later by e mailing to us at GRTU.There are many organisations I wish to thank for their support in organising this Conference. The EU Commission tops the list as this is a project funded by the European Union; The organising consortium; UEAPME and the European Savings Bank Group and Lloyds TSB.From Malta Bank of Valletta and the Malta Financial Services Authority; The Prime Minister for cordially accepting our invitation to address us this morning; our crew at GRTU who have worked so hard to organise this event; to all of you for joining us today.It is with great satisfaction that I now invite the Hon. Dr. Lawrence Gonzi to address us. I thank you and wish you a successful Conference. —————————–Charles J Busuttil – President GRTU – Malta Chamber of Small and Medium EnterprisesStarted his Business career in 1978 manufacturing soft toys and soon after branched into hand screen-printing. This activity led him quite naturally to enter into the souvenir trade and currently has business outlets in the Crafts Village, Ta’ Qali specialising in Malta lace and jewellery.He joined GRTU in 1990 and held Office as a Treasurer, Vice President and for the last six years as President.He represented GRTU in various Governmental Boards and Committee notably amongst them Malta Council for Economic and Social Development.——————————SPEECH BY THE HON. DR. LAWRENCE GONZI, PRIME MINISTER AT THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ORGANIZED BY THE G.R.T.U. ON: “BASEL II FOR SMEs – THE FUTURE OF ACCESS TO FINANCE FOR SMEs – ATTARD – 20 OCTOBER 2004 Ladies and Gentlemen, First of all allow me to kick-start this contribution of mine, by reiterating in the strongest terms possible my government’s commitment to stimulate the economy through supporting Small and Medium Sized enterprises. I am firm in the belief that SME’s are the major lubricant to the economic cycle and a significant catalyst to growth. We are currently devoting a lot of our time and effort on the formulation of the 2005 Budget. In doing so, we are clearly and strategically ensuring that all measures which shall be announced are underpinned by a horizontal thrust to stimulate economic growth. There is, in my opinion, no other alternative path. You have heard me and other government representatives, stressing repeatedly that addressing the budget deficit is a priority. However, I must stress to you all that this national target can never be achieved if it is limited only to cost-cutting and administrative reform. More importantly it must be an exercise that is forward looking and that includes policies for expansion, job creation and investment opportunity.Basel II is yet another confirmation of the kind of interdependent world we live in today. The “Revised Framework for International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards” – to give it its full title – is another example of how our dependence on a sound and stable global financial system is in turn changing not just the way we act in government, in business and as individuals, but also the method of achieving that objective.. Suffice it to say that the Basel II process is underpinned by years of consultation and negotiation between international and national regulatory bodies, by scores of impact assessments at all levels and by a tried and tested method of implementation. During the course of this Seminar, you will have the opportunity to glimpse the global reach of this process.The first Basel Accord started off as an agreement reached by the G-10 countries in 1988 and addressed the need to place financial institutions on firmer ground by adopting minimum capital requirements. The Accord came to be adopted by over 100 countries and was absorbed into our legal and regulatory framework in 1994. Basel II may be generally described as an initiative that seeks to improve the supervisory review of the capital adequacy of credit institutions. It defines a set of disclosure obligations that encourages better market discipline. It is a process that the Central Bank of Malta and the MFSA have been monitoring and evaluating since inception. Six years down the line it is clear that Basel II seeks to manage risks within the global banking system through a balanced approach. The most obvious example of this is the adoption of a multi-layered set of capital rules that are relatively simple at one end of the scale but that gradually get more complex the more internationally-active a bank opts to be. The EU’s approach to Basel II follows much along the same lines. Keeping a delicate balance between regulatory accountability and organisational flexibility, EU legislation adopting the Basle principles pays due attention to the need for close supervision of banks’ internal systems while building on the existing EU-wide regulatory structure. This approach allows supervisory authorities to rely, to an extent, on the validation of such systems carried out by the regulatory authority in the ‘host’ Member State.As you will no doubt be hearing later on today, studies commissioned by the European Commission have shown that the overall impact of the new capital requirements framework for credit institutions should be positive for the EU. More significantly from the local perspective, the findings are that there would not be any major disadvantages for smaller credit institutions. Moreover, banks lending primarily to SMEs and retail customers should not be adversely affected by the new capital requirements.I shall leave the technical details for the experts. It is worthwhile noting, however, that the implementation of Basel II could very well serve as a litmus test for our restructured and revitalised economy and its potential to compete in a dynamic and global environment. This correlation between developments at the international level and the challenges we have been taking on at the national level places our standards into sharp relief and tests our determination to succeed in today’s unequivocally global village.Our root and branch reform of the financial services sector in 1994 is perhaps the best example of our ability to keep up with an international financial system that becomes more sophisticated by the day. It is fair to say that this sector has all along been able to respond very well to the exacting standards expected of any internationally respected finance centre. It is to our credit that the robustness of our supervisory framework and the health of our financial system have been reaffirmed over and over again through successive evaluations carried out by international bodies such as the OECD and IMF, and by our peers in the EU. While we must continue to be vigilant at all times, it is comforting to note that our Central Bank and the MFSA have teams that have been involved in the Basel II debate all along and that local banks have also been involved in the impact testing organised by the Basel Committee in conjunction with the European Commission, ahead of implementation.With regard to our SMEs it is important that our commitment to provide and maintain a level playing field for this extremely vital component of our economic framework permeates all levels of policy making and administration, on a continuing basis. It is critically important therefore that, in line with the Lisbon Agreement, we continue to ensure that the competitiveness of SMEs in our country is not adversely affected by administrative measures and initiatives, even if these are taken in the general interest of our economic well being. Indeed public sector organisations, whatever their role, also have a brief to ensure that the formulation and implementation of such measures adequately takes into account the interests of SMEs in this regard. As a member of the international community, Malta must comply with internationally accepted levels of regulation in all areas. At the same time, regulatory authorities must unshackle the business operators from unnecessary bureaucracy. A lot has been achieved in this area in recent years, but the task is ongoing. There are numerous international benchmarks against which to gauge our progress. How long does it take to register a company, to obtain bank finance, to be granted planning permission or to be awarded a court judgment? In an enlarged single market, foreign investment, large or small, will flow to the jurisdiction that delivers best and fastest. You will agree with me that the banking sector in Malta has My Government welcomes the joint initiative taken by —————————— Vincent Director General – GRTU A Maltese Perspective So now we’ve The Our survey shows that our entrepreneurs are willing to invest I stressed These are firms that fall within the category of small. Those We asked of course, (chart5) about financing. We also asked our firms what keeps them from We see next the Somebody has described me as the “Angry Voice of private Initiative”. I Is Basil II sufficient?” Does Basil II Government needs however to take the lead. The Prime But An enterprise policy is the one that puts enterprise first. In conclusion I quote from a draft The Report says that the Lisbon Agenda adopted by the EU The Report The message is clear. We are already overburdened more than we I believe It is from this perspective that Maltese SME’s want to see the I’d like now to have your views on all this. —————————— Vincent Farrugia B.A Vincent V ——————————
Basel II for Mr. Gerhard Huemer SMEs are concerned:
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