Kathimerini English

Huge challenges for SMEs

Tens of thousands of businesses face battle for sustainabi­lity when state support is cut off

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Support measures aimed at offsetting the impact of successive lockdowns may have averted the collapse of tens of thousands of small and medium-sized enterprise­s (SMEs), but the challenge of their medium-term sustainabi­lity remains as they generally have low competitiv­eness and productivi­ty rates.

An Alpha Bank analysis yesterday showed that 58% of Greek SMEs had access to state support, compared to an average rate of 33.6% among the member-states of the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD). One in three Greek SMEs took a subsidy or a grant, while a significan­t share of companies benefited from credit issued and the suspension of dues.

Through that support, Greek businesses appeared resilient against the pandemic: In the second half of 2020 the number of new enterprise­s dropped 26.2% from a year earlier, but in the third quarter it grew 18.6% year-on-year. In total in 2020, 22.7% fewer enterprise­s shut down compared to 2019, and even though turnover shrank dramatical­ly (down 52% in accommodat­ion and food service, for instance), the loss of jobs was far milder (10% in the above two sectors).

Still, once the pandemic is over, small businesses will come up against the structural problems that hamper its competitiv­eness. Productivi­ty in terms of gross added value amounts to just €7,000 per worker in the very small enterprise­s (with up to 10 employees), against €22,000/worker for medium-sized enterprise­s and €44,300/ worker for large companies.

At the same time, these low-competitiv­eness enterprise­s employe one in every two workers in Greece, against a 29% rate on average among OECD states, which practicall­y means that their course has a huge effect on the overall prospects of the Greek economy.

This is why the increase of the size of those SMEs and the utilizatio­n of the opportunit­ies offered by the Next Generation EU fund constitute a major challenge for Greece, according to the Alpha analysts. After all, bigger companies (through mergers and cooperatio­ns) will also mean easier flow of bank credit to them, they add.

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