The Malta Business Observer, 23rd September 2020

Page 1

NEWS Issue 114

| September 24, 2020

Distributed with Times of Malta

Budget 2021: continued COVID assistance top priority for companies

A European Union Digital Services Act will establish a truly level playing field on the internet marketplace, which will benefit both companies and consumers, says MEP Alex Agius Saliba see pages 6, 7 >

Rebecca Anastasi Ahead of next month’s Budget 2021, private sector companies, across a spate of industries, have insisted on the necessity for further measures to mitigate the financial fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic. Speaking to The Malta Business Observer, these firms and SMEs – which operate across various sectors, including retail, food and beverage, financial services, legal, and travel – have said the unprecedented situation requires additional aid for companies to digitise or to, simply, survive the challenges which lie ahead in 2021. “Let’s face it, we are in the middle of a financial crisis caused by a pandemic. We have never been here before, in recent history,” Dr Joseph F. Borg, Partner at legal firm WH Partners said, adding that “it is safe to say that it will get worse until it gets better.” As a result, he felt it would be “presumptuous” to expect small businesses to have enough liquidity to digitise – despite the increasing necessity of doing so in a highly-volatile situation brought on by the pandemic. For the legal and tech expert, the Government

BUSINESS OPINION

Jeanette Borg, the Founder of Malta Youth in Agriculture Foundation (MaYA), outlines the current status quo in the agricultural sector, and calls for action to ensure economic growth in this area. see page 13 >

should help businesses adapt to a new environment. “This pandemic has taught us how important it is for businesses to go online. In fact, I believe it was a lifeline for those that were already equipped. Government should intervene financially and encourage small and medium sized businesses to digitise,” he insisted.

He added that Government should also implement measures assisting businesses to look beyond Malta’s borders, with incentives tied to the exportation of products and services, while also encouraging the private sector to capitalise on the advantages of going digital. Thus, he underscored, “incentives and measures should also encourage

automation and the use of technology to replace manual processes that render businesses slow and uncompetitive.” He also asserted that he believed in “the principle of leading by example” and, as such, the authorities “should pledge to improve its online services and continued on page 3

CASE STUDY

Carm Cachia, the Chief Administrator, eSkills Malta Foundation, underscores the necessity of continuous education, across all levels, for Maltese businesses to reap the rewards of a technologyliterate society. see pages 14, 15 >


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