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The Union celebrates its 10 years

Warsaw, 9th June 2020

The Union celebrates its 10 years

Ten years of operations of the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers coincides with the most dynamic period of economic development in the history of Poland. Small and medium-sized companies are responsible for 51% of Poland’s economic growth after 2010. Nowadays, SMEs account for 99.8% of all entities conducting business activity, employ 68.7% of the total number of people employed, and together represent 10 million voters.

It is no wonder then that the number of institutions and politicians who feel they are the fathers of SME’s success is increasing so quickly.

Back when we were starting, there were only five of us and we only needed a couple of rooms is an attic. In the minds of various officials, but also many Poles, the stereotype dating back to the Polish People’s Republic regarding private owners, small producers, slyboots and dodgers was still commonplace. They were treated as such in the offices whenever they wanted to start a business or demanded equal treatment by the tax office.

Ten years ago, we were convinced that this was a one-year project. We believed that this long was enough to inform politicians about the disproportionate rules and taxes imposed on entrepreneurs and what privileges corporations enjoy, and as a result to change it. We thought it was enough to indicate some good practices, and that politicians hand-in-hand with officials would introduce and implement them themselves. We were wrong about how much time we would need, nevertheless we were able to fix a number of important matters over the years. And there’s still more to come. We are constantly trying to explain the importance of repairing the legal and institutional environment to the authorities both in Warsaw and Brussels, where we were forced to open an additional office.

Today, the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers represents 51,889 companies associated in 14 regional and 20 industry organisations. Our member-companies employ 576,917 people.

A thriving small and medium-sized enterprise sector is really the only common denominator of all the world’s most developed economies. It doesn’t matter if their competitive advantages result from new technologies, a powerful financial sector or production capacity, they all rely on an extensive and flexible network of small and medium-sized companies.

Poland today has found itself in a place of historical opportunity. The stabilisation of the labour market and where we will be placed within the pyramid of global prosperity will largely depend on how we shape our financial and economic policies in this very moment. Just like 10 years ago, so today it does seem to us that we only need a few globally proven legal and institutional solutions to put Poland on the fast track to the top of the most developed countries in the world. To our members – the terrific people who every day drive our economy further and who granted our nation prosperity and a quality of life incomparable to anything that had ever been achieved in Poland before – we wish high spirits, further development and many successes.

The Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers

 

P.S. Today, in the courtyard of the former Central Committee of the Polish United Workers’ Party, celebrations were to be held on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the founding of the Union. For reasons known to everyone, they were postponed until December 3rd later this year. We are really looking forward to it.

 

See the video: 10 years of the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers in 10 minutes

Union presents the post-Covid-19 crisis Economic Recovery Plan

Warsaw, 5th May 2020

Union presents the post-Covid-19 crisis Economic Recovery Plan

The Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers commences a series of publications called “The post-Covid-19 crisis Economic Recovery Plan”. In the coming weeks, the Union will present a programme of thorough reforms of economic law, tax system, pension system, judiciary, labour market, ensuring universal Internet access and a plan to tackle demographic problems.

In the 1st pillar published today, the Union’s experts presented quick-win point solutions, the implementation of which will quickly improve the legal environment for companies in Poland. The 16 point recommendations by the Union include recommendations on ensuring stability and predictability of the law, an appeal to put on hold the plans for raising the minimum wage, a withdrawal from changes in non-interest consumer credit costs, the widespread implementation of cash accounting, limiting the use of sectoral taxes, repealing the law on trade restrictions on Sundays, increasing the tax exempt amount, shortening the time for issuing administrative decisions, enabling distance sales of prescription drugs or providing access to public databases, and further development of state administration digitalisation.

The quick-win solutions presented in the 1st pillar, unlike the subsequent chapters planned, are of a technical nature. They do not require any thorough system reforms. The implementation of the presented solutions is also non-critical in terms of public debate. Their implementation is a quick win for all stakeholders,” says Piotr Palutkiewicz, Secretary of the Union’s Department of Law and Legislation.

Cezary Kaźmierczak, the President of the Union, comments: “The current crisis will probably find its place in history textbooks. The most important thing is that these times are referred to as a breakthrough period, after which our country advanced to higher places in rankings that assess the standard of living, economic development, personal freedom or internal and external security. Every effort should be undertaken to ensure that 2020 is not recorded as the point at which the 30-year-long period of Poland’s reconstruction came to a halt. Therefore, this time should be used to carry out thorough reforms in numerous areas”.

In its report, the Union states that in the face of the ongoing economic crisis related to the COVID-19 epidemic, it is also necessary to “unfreeze” as soon as possible all the sectors of the economy whose operations were restricted by the government’s administrative decisions.

There is no doubt that having lifted most current restrictions, the economy, society, and politics will start functioning in theirs new reality. We will be witnessing economic changes, the birth of new models of functioning in society and culture, as well as novel use of technology. We will perceive health or ecological issues in a different light,” the Union’s experts write in the report. “The global coronavirus crisis is and will be a time of reviewing the current models and patterns of functioning of each area of life that we have known so far”.

That is why the government must start implementing bold reforms that will adapt the law to the new economic and social realities. In the weeks to come, we will be presenting our solutions .” – sums up Cezary Kaźmierczak.

05.05.2020 The post-Covid-19 crisis Economic Recovery Plan: 1st Pillar – Point Solutions – quick win

 

Fot. geralt / pixabay.com

Union on 5G: a massive opportunity for the Polish economy, a condition for the development of Industry 4.0, a necessity in the face of changes sparked by the pandemic

Warsaw, 22nd April 2020

 

Union on 5G: a massive opportunity for the Polish economy, a condition for the development of Industry 4.0, a necessity in the face of changes sparked by the pandemic

Technological progress, increased demand for digital services, and ultimately lasting changes in socio-economic life caused by the coronavirus pandemic – these are the main circumstances affecting the reality that 5G is not only a chance for Poland to accelerate its pace of economic development, but even as much as a necessity. To take full advantage of the available opportunities, we must launch this technology efficiently, quickly, and safely – these are the basic conclusions from the report by the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers on the opportunities and prospects associated with the implementation of 5G in Poland.

It is an undoubted fact that an increasing share of social and economic activity is being moved to the Internet. Of the 4.5 billion people online, as many as 300 million have used the web for the first time in the past year, so virtual traffic is getting increasingly heavy. Network usage patterns are also changing. While in 2010, less than 40% of mobile phone users in the United States used them to browse the Internet, it is estimated that 75% of Internet users will only browse it using smartphones by 2025. In light of such a dynamically increasing demand, it is hardly surprising that the technologies available today are slowly exhausting their possibilities. Moreover, Internet users expect progressively newer and more widely available services, whereas the industry is constantly moving towards digitisation and automation. Ultimately, the coronavirus pandemic sparked changes in job models and leisure time activities alike, which further increased network traffic. The implementation of the 5G standard seems to be the answer to all the above challenges.

What the coronavirus has caused is that we spend significantly more time at home,” says Cezary Kaźmierczak, President of the Union. “Regardless of whether we watch TV series during this time or participate in business video conferences, we contribute to the increase of network traffic.

Due to its technical parameters, the 5G network will enable the development of new services and products that will substantially change the economic life in Poland. Autonomous vehicles, the Internet of Things, augmented or virtual reality, remote production management – the widespread use of these possibilities, which make up the concepts of Industry 4.0 or the “fourth industrial revolution” announced in the past, will not be possible without the capacities guaranteed by the 5G technology.

The Strategy for Responsible Development is a document which clearly outlines the desired direction of the Polish economy’s development,” says Jakub Bińkowski, Director of the Department of Law and Legislation of the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers. “Our economy is to become one that is knowledge-based with high added value. Achieving this goal without the efficient implementation of the 5G network seems impossible”.

The Union’s experts emphasise in their report that swift action is essential. Other countries (both in Europe and Asia) have already undertaken important steps. The race for 5G is a global one. Therefore, we ought to focus on implementing this standard in an effective, fast, and secure manner. According to the authors of the report, to achieve this, it is necessary to ensure free competition as part of the selection of infrastructure providers, as well as to set restrictive technical security standards and to protect the system against dependence on one supplier.

It is an obvious fact that 5G is a very big chance, but in the current situation, it already is a necessity to commence implementing this standard quickly. Universal access to high-speed Internet along with enabling entrepreneurs and consumers to use services based on the latest technologies is a prerequisite of our further development,” summarises Cezary Kaźmierczak.

 

22.04.2020 Report by the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers: Implementation of the 5G technology in Poland – prospects and opportunities

 

Fot. geralt/pixabay.com

Position of the Union on the “financial shield for companies”

Warsaw, 8th April 2020


POSITION OF THE UNION OF ENTREPRENEURS AND EMPLOYERS
ON THE “FINANCIAL SHIELD FOR COMPANIES”

From the very beginning of the crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic, the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers has emphasised the need to rapidly launch a programme to secure the liquidity of Polish companies. A significant number of entities has the ability to operate for a certain time without profits, however, deepened liquidity problems may lead to a real wave of bankruptcies. This would translate into an economic calamity, the loss of hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of jobs, and the years of unprecedented economic growth and development in Poland going to waste. We are glad that an effort was undertaken to introduce a quick and simple tool to support the financial liquidity of companies.

According to the information presented during the Prime Minister’s press conference, Polish companies are to receive as much as PLN 100 billion (4.5% of GDP) of direct financing within a very short time, of which as much as PLN 75 billion will be allocated to the SME sector. The limit of funds earmarked for a single company depends on its size category – micro-companies can get a maximum of PLN 324,000, while small and medium ones approximately up to PLN 3.5 million. Aid for companies from the SME sector is to take the form of simple subsidies paid through banks. Meanwhile, large companies can obtain loans or bonds worth up to PLN 1 billion.

According to the official communiqués, the allocation mechanism is to be simplified to the highest possible extent and based on statements. This declaration is all the more pleasing, because the liquidity support measures proposed so far as part of the ‘anti-crisis shield’ were unfortunately encapsulated with too complicated formal procedures and requirements. Declarations on the simplicity of introduced solutions seem to be confirmed by a very transparent catalogue of criteria for providing support. The prerequisite is that revenues fall by at least 25% compared to the previous month or the corresponding month of the previous year. Furthermore, this financial aid is to be granted to those entities which were banned from operating due to sanitary restrictions. In the case of large entities, financing is to be granted on more individualised terms, under which, for example, the payment of taxes in Poland should also be taken into account.

The support scheme also has a simple structure in terms of organisation. Financing for the SME sector is to be distributed through commercial banks in the most digitised way possible. Large companies are to be attended to directly by the Polish Development Fund. Financing will be granted on the basis of simple collateral, e.g. promissory note, and the funds may be allocated to cover the costs of conducting business, in particular employee remuneration.

According to the mechanism presented, part of the support provided is to be non-refundable. Micro-enterprises can count on the write-off of 75% of their receivables if they continue to operate and maintain average employment within a year of obtaining funds. In the case of small and medium-sized enterprises, a 50% write-off depends on these conditions, and an additional 25% may result from the loss on sales incurred by the company.

As already highlighted, large companies are to be subject to a different financing regime: they can count on loans on preferential terms, partly non-refundable, bonds or investment financing in the form of taking up shares or stocks.

The presented package of financial support for companies seems to be adequate to the level of threat resulting from the coronavirus pandemic. Companies impatiently awaited a similar project, and the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers in almost every subsequent publication stressed the need to quickly introduce such a tool. We are glad that our voice has been heard. We trust that with this bold move the government has a chance to save many jobs and companies. Perhaps this will allow Poland to go through the crisis with dry feet (as the Polish saying goes), which would undoubtedly be a great achievement.

 

08.04.2020 Position of the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers on the financial shield for companies

 

Fot. _Alicja_ / pixabay.com

Appeal to the government for a safe return to work

Warsaw, 8th April 2020

 

APPEAL TO THE GOVERNMENT FOR A SAFE RETURN TO WORK

 

The government must immediately expand the Anti-Crisis Shield with a consistent return to work programme. Without this, Poland will not only waste the money allocated for financial support, but also the achievements of a whole generation of Poles.

  • The Anti-Crisis Shield must be armed with an economic recovery program,

  • PLN 220 billion in aid for enterprises at risk,

  • The Danish company reactivation programme possible to implement in Poland.

The Polish government, following in the footsteps of other countries, adopted an anti-crisis package designed to protect companies and their employees from the effects of the coronavirus epidemic. The program, however, has many shortcomings and is insufficient, which is why Poland is in need of the Anti-Crisis Shield Part 2. We consider it essential to exempt all SME operations from social contributions for 3 months and to introduce a liquidity package launched for all companies on a promissory note up to 15% of their last year’s turnover (guaranteed by the National Bank of the Republic of Poland – NBP). All this should and can be financed by debt and giving up new social programs (except for 500+ programme for the second+ child).

Nevertheless, current (and future) programmes will accomplish nothing unless we go back to work. The state has no money of its own and will not last long cut off from tax revenues. Taxes do not pay themselves. Taxes are paid by working people and companies. We have to get back to work. Otherwise we will go bankrupt – regardless of the taxes that will be invented and imposed and the declared aid programmes for companies and employees.

We are risking to lose 30 years of development of Poland.

We appreciate the efforts and openness of the government, but a plan without a strategy to get out of the crisis is not a plan, but just an ad hoc defence tactic. The crisis will not end on the same day the epidemic is over, but on the day most Poles return to work and companies will be able to function relatively normally. That is why we need a roadmap, a comprehensive programme to outline the steps we need to take to resume our companies’ operations and provide jobs for people who are uncertain of what tomorrow brings. We are aware that nothing happens overnight. We know that it is difficult to predict how the epidemic will develop, but the uncertainty and lack of perspective will kill many more companies than it would appear from a simple balance sheet of losses.

Entrepreneurs need an approximate time frame, and if not a time frame, then conditions in which they can wake their companies up from a state of lethargy. Just as we plan sickness and death curves, we should also plan a return-to-work curve. At what variables can we consider re-opening a company? This way, we will create a chart that will not only tell us how many people have died and how much our situation deteriorates daily, but will also give us some prospects of getting out of this economic struggle. For entrepreneurs facing today the decision whether to dismiss employees or fight for survival, this could be information saving hundreds of thousands of jobs and sustaining hope for normalcy – the most scarce product in stock nowadays.

Denmark can serve as an example in this case. A country which, just like Poland, took the threat of the epidemic very seriously. A few hours before Poland, all Danish borders, kindergartens, schools and most of the activities that were associated with direct contact of people were closed and shut down. Today, in the same spirit of responsibility, their government is preparing to gradually lift restrictions and reopen companies.

The Danish anti-crisis programme was thoroughly thought out and focused on the protection of critical social fabric, which is the relationship between the employee and the employer. The Danish government acted faster than its Polish counterpart, more aggressively and on an incomparably larger scale in terms of both the scale of financial support and the introduction of restrictions and bans. They were successful. Employees kept their jobs, the virus is wasting away. Now the most pressing issue is for companies to start earning money again. Otherwise, all the help will be in vain.

The return-to-work programme must be an integral part of the Anti-Crisis Shield. The billions we have spent and will spend on protecting Polish employees will last for a few weeks. After Easter, we will be back in the same place, only poorer for the money spent. Unless we resume economic activity, 10% our GDP will go down the drain. No economic profits, only political losses for those who promised stability.

While maintaining the necessary flexibility and observing all security measures, we should reverse the current thinking pattern and restrict economic activities only of those companies that under no circumstances can reopen. Others, as long as they are able to keep adequate security measures in place, should be allowed to gradually resume their operations. Since most grocery stores have learnt to operate under these difficult conditions, most offices and institutions can certainly open up, not to mention services where customer contact is much more limited.

We consider the accusation of putting the companies’ interests above the safety and lives of Poles particularly cynical and unsuccessful. Poles, like the Danes, as Prime Minister Helle-Thorning-Schmidt said, will never be safe locked up in their homes if they have nothing to return to. This, of course, applies to all of us, though not to an equal degree. People and companies directly affected by the obligation to keep distances, limited direct contacts, travel bans, and border closures suffer the most from this downtime. The vast majority of these are small and medium-sized transport companies, restaurants, workshops, beauty salons, sales salons, the clothing industry, hairdressers, service outlets and hundreds of others. A total of 10 million people who cannot rely on a fixed salary or government jobs. But if we don’t go back to work, the latter group may not be there soon either.

OECD estimates show that four weeks of paralysis of the Polish economy equals 28% our annual national income. Each subsequent week is a shift back in time to the age of double-digit unemployment, the pauperisation of a significant part of society and the wasted opportunities of the next generation of young people. The virus will eventually be defeated and the vast majority of the population will never even be at high risk. Most will learn to minimise the risks. The recession, however, will remain in the public memory for all time as a symbol of the rule of current political formation.

The Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers

 

Appeal to the Government for a safe return to work

 

Fot. Free-Photos / pixabay.com

#ReturningToWork: Actions to prevent and curtail the pandemic in the production sector

Warsaw, 10th April 2020

 

#ReturningToWork
Actions to prevent and curtail the pandemic in the production sector

 

Yesterday, the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers presented a plan of going back to work for the entire economy and in particular for those industries, whose activity was limited due to government restrictions.

The Union calls for the immediate implementation of the plan how the Polish people can return to work. The wealthiest countries of the European Union have already planned to gradually lift restrictions and resume the economy after Easter. OECD data show that losses in Poland resulting from the lockdown can reach as much as 28% of Poland’s GDP. This would be one of the worst results among developed countries. If Poles do not return to work immediately, then both Anti-Crisis Shields and the billions of zloty to stimulate the economy will be wasted. We simply cannot afford that outcome.

Herein, we present you the recommendations of the Union for the industrial production sector in the field of counteracting CODIV-19 infection. The study is based on experience and proven practices implemented worldwide by Procter&Gamble.

Each enterprise and management board, most familiar with the realities within their companies, will find adequate solutions and recommendations that will help them increase employee safety and significantly reduce the risk of coronavirus infection.

We recommend making use of the following solutions beginning today:

  1. Conducting regular information campaigns for employees and external companies – via e-mail, TV screens, boards on the fence; sound system outside the facilities to relay police communiqués.

  2. Separating parts of production facilities to eliminate contact between employees.

  3. Division of factory employees from individual shifts into several teams – each team starts and finishes work on individualised times, separate places where employees are waiting for work to start.

  4. Separate work entrance and exit to eliminate the possibility of contact between employees from various teams.

  5. Implementation of a new entry/exit system for temporary employment agency employees to eliminate people grouping before entering the company premises.

  6. Implementation of additional security at production lines workstations.

  7. Public transport: change in the organisation of bus stops and bus timetables; implementation of buses dedicated only to individual teams.

  8. Limiting the number of people staying in common areas in order to ensure adequate distance (e.g. staff canteen, breakfast rooms, smoking room).

  9. Providing a dedicated breakfast room and toilet for each department.

  10. Introduction of a contactless thermometer measurement, followed by a thermal imaging camera measurement.

  11. Limiting the number of guests entering facility grounds only to necessary visits and monitoring them (introducing the medical self-assessment procedure and measuring the temperature with a non-contact thermometer in installed booths).

  12. Introduction of a procedure that minimises the contact of lorry drivers in distribution centres with security and cleaning crew (e.g. distance 1.5 m, installation of booths, hand disinfection after each contact with documents, disposable gloves for drivers, separate waiting areas for drivers).

  13. Installation of intercoms in all security booths on the factory premises, at the parcel pickup point and in the mail room to allow contact without the need for direct interaction, all shipments delivered at only one central pickup point.

  14. Providing means for disinfecting individual work places (implemented schedule with a list of points for disinfection before starting work – on production sites and in offices). Increased cleaning frequency, regularly wiped handrails, elevator buttons and other common areas.

  15. Increasing the number of stations with disinfectant and the number of dispensers with paper towels in toilets (replacing dryers with paper towels).

  16. Change of all meetings to remote mode.

  17. Implementation of a home office policy for employees who are able to work from home.

  18. Support for employees in terms of childcare in case of schoolchildren.

  19. Limitation of meetings and gatherings – implementation of the minimum 1.5 meter distance principle between employees implemented (e.g. in assembly places waiting for work to start, visual markings for places where employees should stand) introduced.

  20. Introduction of the rule: giving up handshake greetings.

  21. Cancellation of meetings and trainings along with implementation of online trainings where necessary.

  22. Introduction of an employee canteen schedule and a change in the rules of serving meals: elimination of cash payments, introducing ready-made foiled sets, replacing salt and pepper shakers with sachets.

  23. Change of work rules, e.g. administration personnel: implementation of remote assistance.

  24. Limiting business trips.

  25. Daily virtual meetings with business partners to ensure they implement the same procedures and keep you updated on all changes and processes.

  26. Change in the rules of functioning of company stores: closing a stationary store and enabling home delivery for employees.

  27. Securing the right number of protective masks for employees and training in the use of masks.

  28. Development of a procedure for the event of a suspected infectious disease shared with all managers as well as setting up a separated isolation room.

  29. Replacement of furniture with models enabling rapid disinfection.

  30. Additional disinfection stations in drivers’ rooms and warehouses; employees are prohibited from using the toilets and showers for drivers; minimising contact with drivers (delivery documentation provided by e-mail, drivers’ keys packed in disposable plastic bags, using disposable gloves); if employees need to go outside, the driver is obliged to stay in the car.

We hope that a reasonable application of some or all of the above guidelines will ensure the safety and sense of security for employees, and will guarantee uninterrupted production capacity in industrial facilities.


#ReturningToWork


The Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers in cooperation with Procter & Gamble

 

Fot. marcin049 / pixabay.com

Appeal by the Union to the Polish Government

Warsaw, 23rd March 2020


The Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers appeals to the Government
to take the threats facing Poland seriously

The Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers calls for a serious consideration of the threats the Poland is presently facing. This extraordinary situation requires the Government and Parliament to re-examine the solutions proposed in the project known as “The Anti-Crisis Shield”.

Only three months ago, Poland had the lowest unemployment since 1989, uninterrupted economic growth for three decades, and a rapidly growing productivity of Polish enterprises. Those times are behind us. We are entering a new reality and must not act in accordance with the ‘business as usual’ rule.

And not only here and now, but also in the days to come when we will have to start rebuilding the economy in difficult conditions and in a changed global economic environment. Wealthier and more developed countries such as the United States forecast an increase in unemployment up to 30%. For many developed countries, this may mean taking a step back by as many as 10 years. For Poland, a new-born amongst developed countries, this may translate into a return to the category from which it took the hard work of the last two generations of employees and employers to get us out.

The Government and the Sejm must understand that this time there will be no second chances. The seriousness of the situation is best reflected in the stabilisation programmes of other European countries and the United States, and we recommend the authors of the new act and all Polish MPs to familiarise themselves with them.

The Union finds a number of praiseworthy legal provisions in the Government’s proposals. Among them without a shade of doubts are the proposals on deregulation. Above all, these concern the reduction in the number of deadline or their postponement for meeting certain administrative or reporting obligations. Particularly noteworthy are the provisions regulating the disposal of medical waste, renewable energy regulations, the suspension of the obligation to perform periodic medical examinations of employees, postponement of the obligation to submit a new JPK_VAT file (Standard Audit File for Tax), suspension of court dates (part of the proposals presented by the Ministry of Justice) and certain proceedings. We also deem commendable the provisions extending the deadline for submitting applications for the right to stay for foreigners, as well as those extending the already issued residence cards. These issues are fundamental from the point of view of the labour market – the functioning of many industries is already largely based on economic migrants from abroad.

The Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers undertakes to monitor the effects of these facilitations in the coming months, convinced that many of them will deserve their permanent enforcement. In this context, we welcomed the proposal to “relax” the Sunday trade ban by temporarily enabling the unloading, receiving and displaying of essentials on that day. Similar solutions, though more precisely worded and in an earlier timeframe, were undertaken by most European countries, including Germany where most shops on Sundays had remained closed until now. At the same time, we urge you to take a bolder step and call off – at least temporarily – the ban at all.

A clear declaration of the government to waive social security contributions for entrepreneurs is one of the issues that in our opinion require immediate addressing. We understand that this is a difficult period, but the prolonged lack of unanimity regarding social security contributions results in increasing anxiety among entrepreneurs and a growing number of small and micro-companies can simply suspend their business operations, which will not only cause major current financial problems for the state, but might in the future impact a sensitive sector of the economy. Doubts arise as to the subjective scope of this waiver, because reports on this issue are contradictory. According to one version, this exemption would cover self-employed persons whose revenues fell, and all micro-enterprises employing at least one employee regardless of whether the pandemic had any impact on the generated revenues. According to the second version presented in the media, waiving of the contributions would apply only to those entities that could prove a decrease in revenues. We believe that only those solutions make sense in the current situation that are simple and as easy to implement as possible. Valuation and setting conditions of any kind condemn the whole idea of support to failure. Once again – the current situation is extraordinary. There is no place here for the traditional ‘rites and rituals’ of officials at the Social Insurance Institution (Zakład Ubezpieczeń Społecznych) who used to celebrate applications on a daily basis, analyse tax returns, put entrepreneurs at attention like during a drill in the army, without respect for their time and costs additionally incurred by accountants and tax advisors. The same issue concerns the assistance in financing employees’ remunerations, which assumes a three-tier structure for granting employee support. We understand the traditional fear of officials that someone will get too much. However, we wish to point out that in the current situation, if this people receive financial aid in June or September, there will be limited sense to maintain employment of tax officials.

With undisguised amusement we have read the proposals regarding loans to entrepreneurs. Loans in the amount of PLN 5,000. With all due respect for Polish clerks and officials’ salaries, these funds are in no way compatible with the purpose of the loan, determined in accordance with the regulations as “means to cover the current costs of business operations”. This discrepancy becomes even more pronounced should one take into account the fact that the loan is amortised (together with interest) if the micro-entrepreneur does not reduce the level of employment in comparison to the end of February 2020 for half a year after the loan is granted. This design indicates that the drafters who authored these provisions intend to reward micro-entrepreneurs who maintain employment level in spite of an economically more difficult period. PLN 5,000 will not encourage any entrepreneur to maintain employment in conditions of rapidly decreasing revenues. We are not even going to address the concept the higher amounts would be provided to entrepreneurs as loans provided that the Ministry of Development or the Industrial Development Agency (Agencja Rozwoju Przemysłu) are to have 30 days for substantive and formal assessment of an enterprise’s application. Instead, we refer to the proposals and procedures prepared for by other governments for their entrepreneurs, concerned for the fate of their national economies.

Finally, we wish to draw your attention to the proposals submitted by the Social Insurance Institution that are ludicrous and proof of their authors’ detachment from reality. Apparently taking advantage of the chaos and desperation of many, the Social Insurance Institution decided to introduce an additional obligation to always inform the SII about the conclusion of any and all specific task contracts. This proposal is not only increasing the reporting obligations of entrepreneurs in these hard times, but is also a shocking testament of lack of empathy.

The Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers appreciates the fact that the project was created on short notice and often required night hours. Nevertheless, we would like once again to remind our authorities to take the situation in which our country and our economy have found themselves very seriously. We really are on the very same boat.

The Union’s appeal to the Government

 

Photo. Free-Photos / pixabay.com

Economy in the times of the plague

Warsaw, 12th March 2020


Economy in the times of the plague


The coronavirus pandemic will probably be the most important challenge for the world economy this year. Already at the turn of December 2019 and January 2020, when information about the outbreak of the epidemic in China began to reach the public opinion in the West, one could have suspected that this problem would quickly become a global issue. The intervention of the government of the People’s Republic of China, although probably a few weeks too late, was so drastic that only a careless observer could have disregarded it. Carelessness, however, came in abundance. During this early period, with the exception of the Taiwanese authorities, no government made any serious attempts to curb the spread of the virus to its territory. Planes flew just as before, people travelled according to their plans, and many commentators and politicians – also in Poland – downplayed the disease by calling it another flu. While European companies were beginning to report certain concerns regarding their deliveries from China being suspended, hardly anyone assumed that the epidemic would take place on such a significant scale in Europe or the United States. At the end of January, this picture began to slowly change with the rapid increase in the number of the infected, not only in the Middle Kingdom, but also in other Asian countries, combined with extreme inhibition of the region’s economy as a result of administrative restrictions trying to stop the epidemic. However, milk had already been spilt. A month later, the number of diagnosed carriers of the virus exceeded one hundred thousand worldwide and a more than a dozen thousand in Europe. At the same time, in some countries – primarily in Iran and Italy – new cases, including serious ones, became so frequent that the healthcare system ceased to handle them efficiently, which immediately translated into a dramatic increase in mortality rates compared to an already very high registered level in China. Other OECD countries have not experienced such a collapse yet at the time, but the number of diagnosed patients is increasing exponentially according to the same pattern as in Italy or – earlier – in China, doubling every 2 to 4 days. Poland is no exception here, although what plays to our advantage are our relatively more peripheral location and lesser integration with the world economy than the densely populated economic centre of Europe (the so-called Blue Banana) extending from northern Italy, through Switzerland, southern Germany and northern France, to the Benelux countries and England.

A relatively small number of infected people diagnosed in Poland (about 40 at the time of writing) should not reassure us. So far, it has been spreading rapidly in all affected countries and it takes about ten days to move from ten to a thousand identified patients. This means that the risk of repetition of the Italian scenario in Poland is very real, despite the fact that the Polish government and administration are trying to learn from the mistakes of other countries by responding relatively quickly, though not entirely consistently. So we do not know if the preventive measures we are taking since the beginning of March – cancelling mass events, quarantine for people who may have had contact with infected patients, measuring temperature at airports or closing universities and schools – will be sufficient. At the same time, despite the evident concern that is visible primarily in empty grocery stores and cancelled business meetings, we are still living quite normally: people meet in restaurants, go out to the park, shopping malls are full, and religious gatherings are held without obstacles. The question is whether this way we are not reminded of what we were doing in January and February when planes from China flew unhindered to Polish airports and back again, and thousands of us – not warned by the government and the media – went on holidays to Italy in spite of the fact that the number of new infections increased there at a staggering rate. Looking at the experiences of Asian countries such as China, Korea, Taiwan, on the one hand, and European: Italy, Germany, France, on the other, we can see that stopping the spread of the epidemic requires radical actions – the more so, the later and they are less consistently they are undertaken. Each day of delay intensifies the problem. It may therefore turn out that the drastic reduction of the mobility of people – not only those directly and indirectly exposed to the virus, but even all residents of the country – is the only way to fight the epidemic and to avoid a collapse in the Polish healthcare system or minimise the risk thereof, i.e. a situation in which overwhelmed doctors and nurses and an overloaded hospital infrastructure are not able to help not even all the infected people, but only those whose condition is critical. In view of the much worse initial state in comparison with not only to Germany or France, but also Italy, thus far the country most severely affected by the epidemic, it may turn out that such a radical intervention will not be avoided. The negligence of the distant and closer past is substantial and our carelessness – both social and political – during the virus spread is clearly evident. We have several dozen percent fewer doctors and nurses per 1,000 inhabitants than Lombardy, which is struggling with a humanitarian crisis. Life support equipment in Polish hospitals – albeit modern – is heavily burdened with regular patients. Drug reserves due to a production shutdown in China are very limited. And the number of tests to diagnose the virus we are carrying out is so small that the probable size of the epidemic is much larger than the Ministry of Health officially admits. So it may turn out that in the second half of March, we will experience the same shock that Italians are experiencing today, i.e. a mixture of direct and indirect effects of the epidemic. The severe cases of the disease too numerous for our healthcare to handle them and thus a significant increase in mortality, combined with strictly economic phenomena: supply chain breakdowns, shortages in stores, collapse in demand not only in selected industries, increasing payment and tax bottlenecks, and the beginning of avalanche of bankruptcies of smaller companies, might truly be a mixture conceived in hell.

The main question currently facing the Polish government is the following: in order to take the control of the epidemic, is it enough to undertake preventive action combined with an autonomous social response leading to a self-imposed decline in mobility around the country? It can be assumed that the answer is unfortunately negative and it will be necessary to introduce more radical measures, going far beyond the current status quo, although at the same time leading to a temporary restriction of certain civil liberties by administrative means. It is first and foremost about strict border controls with accurate registration (also electronically by means of mobile communications) of the place of origin and accommodation in Poland of individual persons, perhaps even in combination with the mandatory temporary quarantine under pain of severe financial or criminal sanctions. A similar quarantine would also encompass the identified outbreaks in the country, not limited as it is today to individual households, but rather covering whole houses, streets or even the recognised sources of infection, as it took place in China. The implementation of such drastic measures is not easy for any democratic government, which explains the slow reaction of Western states, including ours, but at the same time their lack makes the most negative epidemiological and economic scenarios more probable. Moreover, it is not an easy thing to execute in Poland, a country not only affected by the experiences of the 1980s, but also by the lack of lack of trust between the authorities and the opposition. Therefore, it would require urgent cross-party agreement, democratic control, and close cooperation between the central government and local authorities, and readiness to take actions that are negatively perceived by one’s own political supporters (closing of churches, restricting freedom of movement in cities, punishing people breaking the bans with high fines etc.). Is this possible in Poland? One can be doubtful.

Even if such a radical scenario proves to be unnecessary and we go through the epidemic with a limited number of infected patients and relatively mild preventive measures, it is basically impossible today that we will not be affected by a serious economic slowdown and consequently its effects: an increase in unemployment, a decrease in tax revenues, companies going bankrupt etc. The scale of the crisis is still unknown, but we have to take into account a slowdown at least on a scale comparable to that of 2011-2012, and perhaps even the first recession since 1990 which means a decline in GDP and a large increase in unemployment. An additional problem, absent during the previous recessions, of an extent that is hard to predict today is what will happen with our healthcare system and more broadly what will happen with key infrastructural services: water, energy and food supplies. Therefore, the government has to decide now not only how to limit the spread of the virus to levels that can be accommodated by Polish hospitals, but also how to ensure the functioning of the country at a basic level even if the health situation gets out of control. These questions also touch upon the issue of what economic price are we ready to pay for the potential reduction of the risk of a humanitarian collapse in the country and whether this price will not be even higher if such a collapse occurs. A related problem is the question of the instruments that public authorities will be able to use to at first ease the upcoming economic shock and secondly to facilitate a quick recovery when the epidemic is over. Finally, an important point is the question of the long-term effects of the epidemic as well as whether and how we will take care of potential deficits exposed by the virus in healthcare as well as in the entire economy.

It seems that in the first of those areas (ensuring the functioning of basic services during the crisis), the government is currently undertaking actions adequate to the scale of the problem, while also dealing with problems of a deeper, structural nature. Emergency management and procedures have been set up in the financial and energy sectors to enable them to work even in the event of an epidemic spreading to some key personnel. The state budget has reserves allowing it to handle payments for at least several months of crisis without significantly intervening on the market, even in the event of a drastic decrease in revenues. At the same time, the statements of doctors, nurses and public health experts reaching the public opinion indicate that the financial, infrastructural, material and human capital neglect accumulated over the years in our healthcare system will hit us with doubled force when the number of diagnosed cases reaches Western European levels. Attempts at accelerated purchases of medical equipment have not – as yet – brought adequate results.

At the same time, the government – the Ministry of Development to be more precise – undertook the first economic countermeasures, announcing help for industries affected by the crisis, primarily: tourism, mass events, and transport. The proposals presented by the government include, among others, reliefs and deferrals in the payment of direct taxes and social security contributions, facilitation of VAT settlements consisting in earlier enforcement of the new Standard Audit File by three months, earlier VAT refunds. The government also proposes to extend the liquidity support for companies forced to shut down by virtue of the instruments at disposal of Bank Gospodarstwa Krajowego (loan subsidies, guarantees, increasing the guarantee in de minimis aid to 80% of the loan amount, subsidies to interest on loans by covering the disaster fund also in the event of an epidemic). These actions are undoubtedly justified, although the experiences from eight and ten years ago – when the PO-PSL (the Civic Platform and the Polish People’s Party) government introduced similar packages addressed to SMEs in response to the crisis in the Eurozone and the Great Recession in the global financial system – stress the importance which lies in the details of government support, and the significance of an information campaign among companies and the reality of implementation of assistance packages through public institutions: BGK, Social Insurance Institution or Tax Offices. A challenge currently underestimated by the government may be the loss of liquidity by enterprises, not only as a result of falling demand or production downtime caused by the coronavirus epidemic, but also terminations of loan agreements by concerned banks. Not restricting oneself to the tools directly accessible to the administration through Bank Gospodarstwa Krajowego and establishing close cooperation with the entire banking sector may prove to be crucial in this respect. This requires commitment not only on the side of the Ministry of Development, but also the Minister of Finance and the Polish Financial Supervision Authority.

It may be necessary to supplement the government package with well-known solutions from, among others, Germany, including the possibility of a universal adoption of shortened working hours, that is a situation in which employees make use of service days (additional days off during downtimes) and the government subsidises companies with funds for wages and salaries by returning part or all social security contributions. This will create an opportunity to reduce the scale of layoffs in the economy and thus also curb unemployment. Companies should also become able to temporarily renegotiate contracts, for example, by reducing remuneration by 30-50% during the epidemic. This will result in an increase in the public finance sector deficit, which requires an urgent budget amendment taking into account the correction of the GDP growth this year, for instance to 0-1%, and the inclusion of a so-called “bad times clause” in the current expenditure rule. This would increase the deficit by 0.5-1% of the GDP. In case of a very bad turn of events, it will be necessary to announce the state of emergency and increase the deficit by several percent of the GDP, so as to finance the most urgent expenses and thus saving the liquidity of companies and limiting the increase in unemployment. In such a situation, however, the government should simultaneously reconsider certain ongoing commitments, for example, suspending the payment of 500+ childcare benefit for the period of the epidemic for some of its beneficiaries. If things take a very bad turn not only in Poland, but also around the world, it will be necessary to undertake more radical measures that go beyond deferring or suspending tax payments and financing public expenditure with a deficit in hopes of maintaining demand in the economy. Such a non-standard solution (implemented nonetheless in the US during the Great Recession) could be a significant subsidy to the Polish Development Fund (PFR) and greenlighting of share takeover in failing companies (for a pre-limited time).

The final group of challenges that the Polish authorities are facing in connection with the epidemic are long-term activities. Unfortunately, it may turn out that the financial outflow sparked by the coronavirus will demonstrate which segments of our state operate de facto without underwear (as the Polish saying goes), hiding this fact from the public opinion with a veil of prosperity. The Polish health policy is one of the most obvious suspects. One can, however, have almost equally justified doubts concerning the broadly understood public policy that places current transfers over expenditure strengthening the ability to act in crisis situations. The fact that we are carrying out so few tests for the coronavirus is indirectly a consequence of our underinvestment in science. Therefore, the conclusions from the epidemic should first of all be direct: resulting in a rapid and significant increase (approx. 2-3% of the GDP) in healthcare expenditure supplemented with activities leading to an even larger increase (approx. 30%) in the number of doctors and nurses working in the country and subsidising (with medical equipment and material reserves) of hospitals and other facilities that make the whole system operational. Secondly, there must also be indirect conclusions, thanks to which the state will become aware of its own insufficiencies that reduce its ability to act effectively in crisis situations. The strength of individual countries in the face of epidemics (but also other natural disasters, wars or economic crises) is differentiated by what they do in normal times. Do they invest in real capabilities in terms of innovation, organisation, equipment and infrastructure, or do they prefer to spend each zloty or dollar of revenue on current consumption for this or that social group.

It would be a mistake if we did not take advantage of this time of the plague for this kind of reflection on the state of our country, especially since the pandemic – just like any other crisis – will probably be connected with many new opportunities for development in the global system. Above all, those countries will benefit that correctly identified the changes it will have caused, and in particular the transformations that international value chains will undergo, both to the benefit and to the disadvantage of Poland. The countries that will have best survived the epidemic from the humanitarian and economic point of view will probably attract more attention from investors interested in a different distribution of their own business risks. Not without chance, however, will be the hard-hit countries, too, provided they learn from their own weaknesses and consequently will respond with decisive reforms. The worst thing when the epidemic is gone that could happen to us is passivity and a quick return to status quo ante. Will it be different this time?


Author: Maciej Bukowski, Faculty of Economic Sciences of the University of Warsaw

 

Fot. geralt / pixabay.com

European Enterprise Alliance welcomes a new member from Belarus

Warsaw, 17th March 2020


European Enterprise Alliance welcomes a new member from Belarus


During the first General Assembly of 2020 of the European Enterprise Alliance, the membership of a new organisation, the Republican Confederation of Entrepreneurship of Belarus, was approved.

We are delighted to welcome our new member in the world of business and politics and we are looking forward to cooperating on enhancing the business environment for SMEs. The fact that the European Business Alliance joined the EEA is tribute to the appreciation we receive as a young, but highly active organisation within Europe, and not only within the EU,” – said Marcin Nowacki, President of the European Enterprise Alliance.

The Republican Confederation of Entrepreneurship is one of the largest business associations in Belarus. It was founded in 2007 on the initiative of sectoral and regional business organisations. The Confederation unites leading regional and sectoral business associations and private enterprises. The RCE’s priorities are the development of small, medium and large-scale business, and the enhancement of the business environment in Belarus.

Further information: https://www.rce.by/.

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European Enterprise Alliance is an independent organization of experts, entrepreneurs and pro-market intellectuals, convinced that the best way forward is to protect economic freedoms, and in particular to guarantee an equal playing field for small and medium-sized Enterprises.

Equal rights and a transparent business environment enable small and medium-sized enterprises to compete with global players, bringing continuity to the thoughts of the founding fathers of the EU, convinced that European integration can only be achieved by building a community of interests and increasing prosperity.

 

Phot. Chickenonline / pixabay.com

The cosmetics and detergent industry joins the Union

Warsaw, 6th March 2020


The cosmetics and detergent industry joins the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers


Another trade organisation has joined the Union of Entrepreneurs and Employers: the Polish Association of Cosmetic and Detergent Industry. The Association was established in 1992 and brings together manufacturers, distributors, suppliers of raw materials, and other companies operating in the cosmetics and detergent industry.

The Polish Association of Cosmetic and Detergent Industry is the only organisation in Poland that makes use of the synergy of the cosmetics industry and cleaning products, including biostatic products. The Association’s members are small, medium and large enterprises from the cosmetics and detergent sectors. It follows legislative processes regulating the environment for companies from these sectors and their activities, and also participates in them, taking the floor both as an expert organisation and representing entrepreneurs.

Membership in the Association provides entrepreneurs with a tangible impact on the operating conditions of the cosmetics and cleaning products industries, both in Poland and the entire European Union.

The Polish Association of Cosmetic and Detergent Industry represents over 300 brands of cosmetics and detergents.

Further information: www.kosmetyki-detergenty.pl.

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