Manila Bulletin

DTI seeks aid for cash-short start-ups

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The Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said that it will submit a set of assistance programs for startups affected by the COVID-19 for considerat­ion by the Inter Agency Task Force on Emerging Diseases for inclusion in the proposed Economic Stimulus Act.

In a DTI response to the Startup Impact on Covid-19 webinar, Undersecre­tary Rafaelita Aldaba said they are submitting the agency’s proposal financing assistance to at least 70 percent of startups which have runways or cash flow of only up to 6 months.

“There are facilities dedicated for startups to develop new technologi­es and real world problem solutions with potential to drive up economies,” said Karl Pacolor, executive assistant of the Office of the DTI Undersecre­tary who represente­d Aldaba in the webinar.

There are at least three DTI measures-startup assistance during COVID Period. Foremost is the special emergency loans fund through the SB Corp. The DTI will also help in the The Accelerati­on, Techn Support, and Mentoring (Technical Assistance), and Startup Venture Fund.

DTI has also SMART Link to enable better linkages. Startups will be partnered with different enterprise­s to provide firms with modern and digital business solutions. Government will aid in facilitati­ng and finding market opportunit­ies for startups especially linking them to those firms that are interested to undergo digital transforma­tion or adopt new solutions to address their needs.

The recent 2020 Philippine Startup Survey: COVID-19 Edition of Isla Lipana & Co./PwC Philippine­s (PwC) showed that almost half of tech startup founders said that COVID-1 has significan­t impact on their business operations, and is causing them great concern that majority of them may close operation in less than a year under an extended ECQ.

Survey results showed 62 percent say that they only have a cash runway of up to six months, and 70 percent say that they can only sustain by up to six months if the ECQ is extended. Yet interestin­gly, 21 percent of the founders say that COVID-19 is positively impacting their businesses, with an increasing demand for their products and services.

“These are unpreceden­ted times. We have been surveying the Philippine tech startup ecosystem, tracking its progress, for several years, and conducted this followup study to better understand the impact COVID-19 has had on our startup community,” said Katrina Rausa Chan, Director of QBO. (Bernie Cahiles-Magkilat)

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