The Minister of State for Trade, Employment, Business, EU Digital Single Market and Data Protection Pat Breen, TD has welcomed the publication of the 2017 Small Business Act (SBA) Fact sheet for Ireland.
The SBA Fact Sheets are produced annually by the European Commission and aim to improve understanding of recent trends and national policies affecting SMEs across the European Union. Ireland’s SBA profile continues to be competitive and the Fact sheet shows improvements on last year’s performance. In the area of skills and innovation, the Fact Sheet finds that Ireland is the top performer in the EU. Another measure where Ireland scores particularly well is the percentage of public contracts being secured abroad by SMEs. This is at 17.2% many multiples of the EU average of 2.6%
In eight of the nine SBA areas — entrepreneurship, ‘second chance’, ‘responsive administration’, state aid & public procurement, access to finance, single market, skills & innovation and internationalisation — Ireland performs above or well above the EU average. On the environment, Ireland performs in line with the EU average.
During 2016 and the first quarter of 2017, which is the reference period for policy measures in this year’s SBA fact sheet, Ireland implemented a substantial (17) number of relevant policy measures and announced a further three planned measures that will improve conditions for small businesses. A total of 20 measures address 6 out of the 10 policy areas under the Small Business Act. Overall, the stakeholders acknowledge that the progress made in implementing the SBA has been substantial.
Welcoming the publication of the SBA Fact Sheet, Minister Breen said, "I am pleased to see positive results for Ireland in the SBA Sheet again this year. Our rankings have been improving since the publication of Ireland’s first ever National Entrepreneurship Policy Statement in 2014. The Policy Statement sets out a plan until 2020 and the Department of Business, Enterprise and Innovation will shortly publish a mid-term review outlining what has been achieved to date."
Source: www.businessworld.ie