European Foundation
for the Improvement of
Living and Working Conditions

The tripartite EU agency providing knowledge to assist
in the development of better social, employment and
work-related policies

EU PolicyWatch

Database of national-level policy measures

Eurofound's EU PolicyWatch collates information on the responses of government and social partners to the COVID-19 crisis, the war in Ukraine, rising inflation, as well as gathering examples of company practices aimed at mitigating the social and economic impacts.

Factsheet for measure IE-2022-1/2963 – measures in Ireland

Access to Finance Hub

Access to Finance Hub

Country Ireland , applies nationwide
Time period Open ended, started on 01 January 2022
Context COVID-19, Restructuring Support Instruments, European Semester
Type Other initiatives or policies
Category Supporting businesses to stay afloat
– Access to finance
Author Roisin Farelly (IRN Publishing) and Eurofound
Measure added 28 October 2022 (updated 23 October 2024)

Background information

The Access to Finance Hub was established as a single access point for State funding of SMEs, which includes three key funding schemes. It also provides a credit review service for SMEs as well as links to other types of supports available to SMEs.

This instrument has replaced the SME Credit Guarantee Scheme (CGS) .

Content of measure

The funding available is for start-ups and early stage companies as well as established companies seeking to scale up operations.

The three main funding schemes are:

Ukraine Credit Guarantee Scheme: This facilitates up to €1.2 billion in lending to eligible businesses affected by the war in Ukraine. It offers a partial government guarantee (80%) to participating finance providers against losses on qualifying finance agreements to eligible SMEs, small mid-caps and primary producers. Loans under the scheme range from €10,000 to €1 million, for terms of up to six years. Financing can include term loans, working capital loans and overdrafts.

Microenterprise Loan Fund: This provides support in the form of loans for up to €25,000, available to start-up, newly established, or growing micro-enterprises employing fewer than 10 people, with viable business propositions, that do not meet the conventional risk criteria applied by banks.

Growth and Sustainability Loan Scheme: This is a long-term loan guarantee scheme that provides loans to SMEs (including farmers and fishers) of between €25,000 and €3 million, with terms of up to 10 years. Unsecured loans of up to €500,000 are available. The scheme targets a minimum of 30% of the lending volume towards environmental sustainability purposes with the aim of encouraging SMEs to take positive actions in support of the climate change agenda. Up to 70% of lending will be for strategic investments with a view to increasing productivity and competitiveness and thus underpinning future business sustainability and growth.

The Hub also provides access to a Credit Review function which helps SMEs that have been refused credit from the major lending institutions.

Use of measure

For the period October 2012 to March 2024, Microfinance Ireland has received 11,118 applications, approved €85.4m in loans, and has supported 10,703 net jobs in 5,198 micro-enterprises.

Since its launch in September 2023, the Growth and Sustainability Loan Scheme has paid out loans of €50,319,982 to microenterprises, €28,766,670 to small businesses, and €15,361,500 to medium enterprises (total €94,448,152). Just under half of these loans were for amounts of less than €200,000

Target groups

Workers Businesses Citizens
Does not apply to workers SMEs
Does not apply to citizens

Actors and funding

Actors Funding
National government
European Funds
National funds
National Recovery and Resilience Facility

Social partners

Social partners' role in designing the measure and form of involvement:

Trade unions Employers' organisations
Role No involvement No involvement
Form Not applicable Not applicable

Social partners' role in the implementation, monitoring and assessment phase:

  • No involvement
  • Main level of involvement: N/A

Involvement

No involvement

Views and reactions

There are no expressed views of the social partners, as it is not in their domain. The Hub is a portal for SME financing.

Sources

Citation

Eurofound (2022), Access to Finance Hub, measure IE-2022-1/2963 (measures in Ireland), EU PolicyWatch, Dublin, https://static.eurofound.europa.eu/covid19db/cases/IE-2022-1_2963.html

Share

Eurofound publications based on EU PolicyWatch

30 January 2023

 

Measures to lessen the impact of the inflation and energy crisis on citizens

Governments across the EU continue to implement policies to support citizens and businesses in the face of rising food and energy prices caused by the COVID-19 crisis and intensified by the war in Ukraine. This article summarises the policy responses as reported in Eurofound's EU PolicyWatch database from January to September 2022.

Article

12 September 2022

 

First responses to cushion the impact of inflation on citizens

Although the worldwide pandemic situation had already disrupted supply chains and triggered increases in energy and food prices in 2021, the situation deteriorated in 2022 with the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Article

12 September 2022

 

Policies to support EU companies affected by the war in Ukraine

This article summarises the first policy responses that governments across the EU have started to implement to support companies affected by the rising prices, and those with commercial ties to Ukraine, Russia or Belarus.

Article

5 July 2022

 

Policies to support refugees from Ukraine

This article summarises the first policy responses of EU Member States, including those of the social partners and other civil society actors, enabling refugees to exercise their rights under the Temporary Protection Directive.

Article

Disclaimer: This information has not been subject to the full Eurofound evaluation, editorial and publication process.