Global Times

Shanghai delivers relief to 500,000 troubled businesses

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Shanghai has announced its first relief policy for more than 500,000 troubled business owners, who account for 15.7 percent of the city's market entities, to reduce their production and operation costs and improve their business environmen­t.

Chen Yanfeng, deputy director of the Shanghai Municipal Administra­tion for Market Regulation, said at a press conference on Tuesday that the city's 507,700 individual businesses face an unpreceden­ted predicamen­t caused by the Omicron lockdown in April and May, and the importance and urgency of helping the businesses to revive their confidence and stabilize their operations have never been greater.

“Shanghai's economy can only rebound faster by helping all small and medium- sized market players, like individual entreprene­urs. We need to address their difficulti­es and create a good market environmen­t for them,” Chen was quoted as saying in an interview with local media Yicai.

Affected by the pandemic, the city's individual businesses face headwinds including expensive labor, rising production costs, liquidity crunch and operationa­l difficulti­es, Chen said.

The market regulator announced 16 measures to reduce the companies' costs, including tax incentives, rental reductions and utility subsidies.

In terms of financial support, Cao Guangqun, deputy director of the Shanghai Office of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, said on Tuesday that the office has enhanced credit allocation to support the stable operation of small and micro- sized enterprise­s.

According to Cao, as of end- June, Shanghai's average loan interest rates for micro- sized and small market players stood at 4.92 percent, one of the lowest in the country.

Domestic banks in the city extended 117.9 billion yuan in relief financing, covering a total of 37,800 borrowers while providing employment support for as many as two million people.

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