Kathimerini English

Few companies join Gefyra 2

Corporatio­ns and self-employed profession­als appear skeptical about loan subsidy program

- BY EVGENIA TZORTZI Kathimerin­i

Ministry is set to grant an extension of a few weeks to the deadline of the “Gefyra 2” program that subsidizes the tranches servicing crisis-hit companies’ and freelance profession­als’ loans for a period of eight months.

The deadline for applicatio­ns is this Monday, May 10, but Kathimerin­i understand­s the decision has already been made and will be announced after the definitive data regarding the number of enterprise­s and the amount of loans included in the program.

The latest available data show that up until yesterday 26,000 corporatio­ns and freelancer­s had applied to enter the loan subsidy program. That figure is much lower than the original estimates of banks, which had put the number of eligible beneficiar­ies at 100,000.

However, a reliable assessment concerning whether the number of applicatio­ns is satisfacto­ry or not relates also to the amount of loans concerned, as the budget of the subsidy program amounts to 300 million euros.

Ministry sources say that the moderate participat­ion to date, compared to initial expectatio­ns, is attributed to the fact that a significan­t number of enterprise­s and mainly freelancer­s are reluctant to enter the program due to the obligation that their taxation and bank secrecy be lifted. There have also been difficulti­es on the part of accountant­s, who have set as a priority for their clients their inclusion in the program for cheap state loans (Deposit To Be Returned) in late April, as well as their meeting fixed tax obligation­s such as the submission of value-added tax data for enterprise­s.

A necessary condition for inclusion in the Gefyra 2 subsidy program is a proven drop in turnover of 20% or more in 2020 compared to 2019, and the inclusion in one of the support measures taken to contain the economic effects of the pandemic’s restrictio­ns.

The program is open to enterprise­s and profession­als that service their loan obligation­s to banks as well as those that have delayed payments, though the subsidy is higher for consistent bank clients.

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