Saturday, January 7, 2017

Cgia: “Italy will return to pre-crisis levels only in 2024″ – Corriere della Sera

2017, according to the Cgia, the association of craftsmen and small enterprises led by Roberto Bottan (photos), it will be a year of contrasts, with less taxes, more jobs. However the return to pre-crisis levels will only take place in 2024. Net of any corrective action, the fiscal pressure is destined to fall by 0.3% (reaching thus to 42.3%), the Gdp is expected to increase by about a point, the number of employees grow to nearly 112.000 units and the army of the unemployed get off of 84,000 people. In the face of these positive data, concerned, instead, the amount of time that will be required to return to pre-crisis levels, that is, to the values of 2007.

Meanwhile, the Italian banking Association (Abi) announces that between October 2013 and October 2016, were welcomed 21.498 questions of funding, for a consideration paid of € 6.3 billion to a ceiling of 10 billion, destined to Smes loans who intend to make investments in tangible and intangible assets instrumental to the business activities of the company. Loans were disbursed in the context of the initiative Business in development, which aims to foster the growth of investment by Smes, and renewed with the Agreement of the credit to 2015 between the Abi and other business associations. By analyzing in detail the funding requests received, those “covered” by the guarantee Fund for Smes, Ismea or by Sace, as well as by the Trust, representing 21.2%. Disaggregate the data by type of enterprise shows that 42% of the funding is reported to companies of the sector “industry”; 28.6% of the funding is reported to companies of the sect or “trade, hotel and business complex”; 7.9% of the funding is reported to companies of the sector “craftsmanship”; 4.6%, the sector “building and public works”; 3.6% agriculture and the remaining 13.3 per cent, to the companies of the sector “other services”.

January 7, 2017 (amending the January 7, 2017 | 11:54)

© REPRODUCTION RESERVED

LikeTweet

No comments:

Post a Comment