An ESRI report published this Wednesday has found that the cost of finance in Ireland to businesses, including farms, has been high by European standards. For small to medium business loans, which include farms and captures loans smaller than €250,000, the interest rate in June 2017 was 5.2% compared to the Eurozone average of 2.52%.
The study also found that the average interest rate on new loans for all Irish businesses, which includes farms, was 2.54% while the Eurozone average was as low as 1.74%. The report concluded that while interest rates are down year-on-year for farms and other small businesses, interest rates remain considerably higher than for their European peers.
New lending soars
Figures from the CSO show that new lending to farmers soar 30% or €100m in the first half of 2017 compared to the same period last year. With a total of €434m of new money given in the first six months of this year, the amount advanced is up 65% on six-month 2012 figures.
The large increase in new lending in the first half of the year has largely been driven by the €150m made available under the Government’s low-cost loan scheme, which became available at the end of January. There was huge demand for the loans due to the attractive 2.95% interest rate, with the fund fully exhausted within weeks.
The CSO figures also show outstanding debt on Irish farms at the end of June now stands at €3.16bn, 4% lower than the same time last year.
Outstanding debt on Irish farms is now down 30% (€1.3bn) since peaks hit in 2009. The peak was driven by debt associated with farm waste management compliance and since then has seen a continual pay down.
Overall, while total debt levels on Irish farms have fallen, the large increase in new lending means that the debt profile is younger.
Read more
€120m of Budget Brexit loans for food businesses
An ESRI report published this Wednesday has found that the cost of finance in Ireland to businesses, including farms, has been high by European standards. For small to medium business loans, which include farms and captures loans smaller than €250,000, the interest rate in June 2017 was 5.2% compared to the Eurozone average of 2.52%.
The study also found that the average interest rate on new loans for all Irish businesses, which includes farms, was 2.54% while the Eurozone average was as low as 1.74%. The report concluded that while interest rates are down year-on-year for farms and other small businesses, interest rates remain considerably higher than for their European peers.
New lending soars
Figures from the CSO show that new lending to farmers soar 30% or €100m in the first half of 2017 compared to the same period last year. With a total of €434m of new money given in the first six months of this year, the amount advanced is up 65% on six-month 2012 figures.
The large increase in new lending in the first half of the year has largely been driven by the €150m made available under the Government’s low-cost loan scheme, which became available at the end of January. There was huge demand for the loans due to the attractive 2.95% interest rate, with the fund fully exhausted within weeks.
The CSO figures also show outstanding debt on Irish farms at the end of June now stands at €3.16bn, 4% lower than the same time last year.
Outstanding debt on Irish farms is now down 30% (€1.3bn) since peaks hit in 2009. The peak was driven by debt associated with farm waste management compliance and since then has seen a continual pay down.
Overall, while total debt levels on Irish farms have fallen, the large increase in new lending means that the debt profile is younger.
Read more
€120m of Budget Brexit loans for food businesses
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