fbpx Boost to SMEs as Irish Presidency secures agreement on COSME | Page 9 | Science in the net

Boost to SMEs as Irish Presidency secures agreement on COSME

Primary tabs

Read time: 3 mins

The Programme for the Competitiveness of Enterprises and SMEs (COSME) proposes to allocate more than €2 billion over its lifetime to strengthen the competitiveness and sustainability of the EU’s 23 million SMEs.

The Irish Presidency has secured agreement with the European Parliament to improve access to finance for SMEs under the Programme for the Competitiveness of Enterprises and SMEs (COSME) 2014 – 2020. Commenting on this agreement, Ireland's Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation, Richard Bruton TD said, “Achieving agreement on these proposals with the Commission and the European Parliament was a key priority under the Irish Presidency. The only EU programme specifically designed to assist SMEs, COSME aims at improving access to finance and markets, promoting entrepreneurship and improving conditions for the competitiveness and sustainability of EU SMEs. SMEs are the engines of growth and job creation in Europe, and achieving the agreement on COSME sends a strong positive signal to all European SMEs.”

The agreement, secured after more than five months of intensive negotiations under the Irish Presidency, provides for:

Improved access to finance for SMEs in the form of equity and debt comprising over 60% of the total COSME budget, including:

  • An equity facility for growth-phase investment will provide venture capital for SMEs through financial intermediaries
  • A loan facility to provide SMEs with direct or other risk-sharing arrangements with financial intermediaries to cover loans

Improved access to markets for SMEs, to facilitate business expansion inside the EU and globally through growth-oriented support services via the Enterprise Europe Network

Measures to improve entrepreneurial skills and attitudes, especially among new entrepreneurs, young people and women

Minister Bruton: "The Irish Presidency has been about stability, jobs and growth and I recognise the important part SMEs have to play in achieving these goals."
Bruton concluded: "In February, as Chair of the EU Competitiveness Council, I brought together the leading experts on SMEs in Dublin to draw up the best new ideas for SME support and job creation. It’s also the reason why Ireland achieved some valuable wins for SMEs since January such as agreement to reduce the auditing requirements for SMEs.”

Minister of State for Small Business, John Perry TD commented, “As Minister for Small Business and Ireland’s SME Envoy, I warmly welcome today’s agreement. We know that there are over 20 million SMEs in Europe, accounting for more than 98% of all enterprises.

Minister Perry: "If we can just help each of the 20 million EU SMEs generate one additional job we will greatly help address the unemployment issue across Europe. That is why the COSME programme to strengthen the competitiveness and sustainability of the EU’s SMEs is so important.”

The agreement will now be presented to Coreper for final endorsement by Member States.

Source: eu2013.ie

Autori: 
Sezioni: 

prossimo articolo

Why have neural networks won the Nobel Prizes in Physics and Chemistry?

This year, Artificial Intelligence played a leading role in the Nobel Prizes for Physics and Chemistry. More specifically, it would be better to say machine learning and neural networks, thanks to whose development we now have systems ranging from image recognition to generative AI like Chat-GPT. In this article, Chiara Sabelli tells the story of the research that led physicist and biologist John J. Hopfield and computer scientist and neuroscientist Geoffrey Hinton to lay the foundations of current machine learning.

Image modified from the article "Biohybrid and Bioinspired Magnetic Microswimmers" https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/smll.201704374

The 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to John J. Hopfield, an American physicist and biologist from Princeton University, and to Geoffrey Hinton, a British computer scientist and neuroscientist from the University of Toronto, for utilizing tools from statistical physics in the development of methods underlying today's powerful machine learning technologies.