The Citizen (KZN)

Low uptake of the Covid relief

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National Treasury plans no further easing of its coronaviru­s loan scheme criteria to stimulate uptake, meaning almost a third of the government’s R500 billion relief package may end up going unused.

The R200 billion loan programme is a pillar of South African efforts to shield small businesses from the impact of the pandemic. Conditions were tweaked in July, including expanding who qualifies and extending the repayment grace period, after relatively few firms applied for the loans.

Still, only R14.5 billion had been paid out through August. The Banking Associatio­n of South Africa (Basa) estimates at most around R44 billion will be deployed by January.

Despite that, the treasury said it was not planning to ease the scheme further to increase disbursals.

“The low uptake of the scheme also suggests that businesses do not want to incur more debt in light of the economic uncertaint­y,” it said.

It added that the economy’s reopening following a months-long lockdown meant firms would now need less financial support. The treasury said it was also not considerin­g releasing any of that amount as grants, as suggested by some trade unions.

Covid-19 has deepened a recession that predates the pandemic. Banks have reported a spike in bad loan charges.

Under the scheme, the government pledges to reimburse banks for a portion of any eventual losses on qualifying loans with the aim of lowering borrowing costs and making credit available to businesses that might otherwise be considered too high-risk.

By the end of August, some 35% of 42 202 loan applicatio­ns had been rejected for not meeting the scheme’s or banks’ own risk criteria, according to Basa. The programme has attracted significan­tly less interest than similar initiative­s launched in the UK and elsewhere.

More funds – over R30 billion – were disbursed under other earlier relief initiative­s from lenders, such as payment holidays. This, as well as high levels of uncertaint­y and low business confidence, suppressed demand for the guaranteed loans, Basa has said.

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