The Locksmith Journal Jan-Feb 2014 - Issue 30 | Page 5

INDUSTRYNEWS SPONSORED BY SECURITY HARDWARE MORE SMES BENEFIT AS LENDING SCHEME HITS THREE YEAR HIGH SMEs are increasingly able to secure bank loans supported by a Government-backed scheme, as lending under the scheme reached its highest level since 2010. Enterprise Finance Guarantee (EFG) scheme lending figures published recently, show banks offered loans worth £111 million to SMEs in the third quarter of 2013, the most since 2010. As well as the banks offering more ‘Banks offered loans worth £111 million’ and bigger EFG loans to SMEs, the value of EFG loans drawn by businesses this quarter was £87 million, the highest since 2011. EFG is a demand-led scheme which allows banks to lend to SMEs who would otherwise not receive credit, by providing the banks with a government guarantee for 75 per cent of the loan value. Since May 2010, over 13,400 SMEs have been offered EFG loans with a total value of nearly £1.4 billion. Business Secretary Vince Cable said: “Ensuring small businesses have access to the finance they need in order to grow and thrive remains a crucial issue. The EFG scheme is making a vital contribution and businesses needing finance should take heart that the banks seem to have upped their game. “But there are long-standing problems with the finance markets which need addressing, and that is why I have created the British Business Bank. We need a much more competitive and diverse market, which businesses of all sizes can have confidence in and helps build a stronger economy.” Osborne wants above-inflation minimum wage rise Chancellor George Osborne has said he wants to see an aboveinflation increase in the minimum wage. He said the “economy can now afford” to raise the rate, currently set at £6.31 an hour for people over the age of 21, £5.03 for 18 to 20 and £3.72 for under 18s. The call followed Labour claims that the economic upturn has not translated into improved living standards. But Mr Osborne insisted it was Labour’s fault that they had fallen and said he was aiming to make people better-off. The Conservatives opposed the creation of the national minimum wage in 1999. The value of the minimum wage, paid to an estimated 1.35 million people, has fallen in real terms since the financial crisis of 2008. The current rate of inflation is 2%. Mr Osborne said the NMW would have to increase to £7 an hour by 2015 for its value to return to where it was before the economic downturn struck. But he stressed that the decision was not his but that of the Low Pay Commission, overseen by Liberal Democrat Business Secretary Vince Cable. CHINA’S INVESTMENT IN BRITAIN As the world’s second largest economy, the fastest growing economy in the G20 and with more than a trillion dollars sitting in various sovereign wealth funds, China has plenty to invest. According to the Heritage Foundation, in 2005, the Chinese government and Chinese companies collectively invested about $17bn (£11bn) in global assets, Last year they invested almost $130bn. That sounds impressive, but in the context of global world trade or the economic output of developed economies, it is small change. For example, the total amount of money invested by China into Britain over the past nine years amounts to just 0.7% of the UK’s total GDP in 2012. Britain is one of the more popular destinations for Chinese investment. It is in the top 10 nations globally and attracts more than double To read more, visit www.locksmithjournal.co.uk ‘In the top 10 nations globally and attracts more than double the investment of any other nation in Europe’ the investment of any other nation in Europe. Globally, Australia comes out top, but even here Chinese investment last year equated to just 0.6% of the country’s annua