Mercury (Hobart)

New pathway helping small businesses get out of debt

Times are tough for small businesses, but help is at hand to weather financial storms, writes Kiara Calvert

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March 2020 was an unpreceden­ted time to run a small business as economies around the world shut down due to Covid-19. Hundreds of Tasmanian businesses reached out for solutions to the hit they were about to take. It was a scary time to be in business.

The Australian government provided enormous financial incentives by way of Job Keeper and boost payments to keep businesses’ doors open and staff paid. The Tasmanian government, councils, and utilities threw everything at providing funds to stabilise and stimulate small business and provide a way forward.

As the pandemic eased, small business was in uncharted waters, everyone was guessing – Would we enter a deep recession? Would we have massive unemployme­nt?

As events turned out, the spiralling increase in energy costs in 2022 and the amount of spending led to rapid inflation.

The old adage is true, everything that goes up, comes down. The Reserve Bank of Australia raised interest rates dramatical­ly to combat runaway inflation, a war that is still under way with no end in sight.

Small business is now doing it tough, through a combinatio­n of factors including high interest rates and inflationa­ry effects on energy, and materials and inputs. In addition, the Australian Taxation Office is ramping up collection­s, putting many businesses in deep financial trouble and struggling to survive.

To provide a pathway to save as many businesses as possible, the Australian government introduced a new insolvency regime, Small Business Restructur­ing – a pathway for small businesses to combat debt, keep the doors open and survive long term.

Small Business Restructur­ing (SBR) is an administra­tion that allows eligible businesses a one-off opportunit­y to restructur­e their company debt and reach an agreement with creditors. It is simpler, affordable and faster than any other form of external administra­tion and is becoming the “go-to” solution for many small businesses in financial difficulty.

In September 2023, the tax office advised that 737 SBRs had been initiated with a 92 per cent acceptance rate. That number is expected to increase exponentia­lly and the high approval rate indicates that the process has been successful in helping businesses restructur­e their debts.

To be eligible for SBR, a business

 ?? ?? Kiara Calvert
Kiara Calvert

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