Data on the number and value of grants to small and medium sized businesses (SMEs) in response to the coronavirus pandemic. The spreadsheet shows the total amount of money that each local authority and parliamentary constituency in England has: received from central government distributed to SMEs as at 5 July 2020 31 July 2021: coronavirus grant schemes Local Restrictions Support Grant (LRSG): (Open) Local Restrictions Support Grant (LRSG): (Closed) Additional Restrictions Grant (ARG) - scheme open until 31 March 2022. A final update will be released afterwards Christmas Support Payment (CSP) Restart 5 July 2020: coronavirus grant schemes: Small Business Grants Fund (SBGF) scheme Retail, Hospitality and Leisure Business Grants Fund (RHLGF) Local Authority Discretionary Grant Fund (LADGF)
The coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak in 2020 has led the German government to declare future financial support for businesses in the country. According to a survey conducted among ****** companies across various sectors, ** percent of respondents require emergency financial aid in the form of grants.
This release provides estimates of coronavirus (COVID-19) related support schemes, grants and loans made to farms in England. Data are based on farms participating in the Farm Business Survey and are representative only of the survey population. The data covers the period March 2020 to February 2021, the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. The wording of this release was updated on the 17th January 2022 to clarify terminology relating to the Farm Business Survey population. There were no changes to any of the previously published figures.
Defra statistics: Farm Business Survey
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During the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak in Russia, about ** percent of Russians bought food products to support business, as the survey revealed. Moreover, ** percent of ready-made food orders were aimed to promote catering businesses' survival during the lockdown.
This dataset contains payment amounts for Business Support Grants initial, extension, Top-Up or Tourism, Accommodation Provider, Arts and Events, Hospitality and Fitness (TAPAEHF) payments. Payments were made in FY2021-2022 as part of the ACT Government COVID-19 response.
This statistics bank shows how business has made use of ordinary and extraordinary support schemes throughout the corona crisis.
A number of measures were initiated to increase activity in Norwegian business, prevent unnecessary closures and to get as many people as possible into work during the corona crisis. Several actors in the industry-oriented instrument apparatus were given additional tasks and new extraordinary measures were created, such as the compensation scheme through the Tax Agency.
In order to be able to monitor the use of the measures, the Ministry of Trade and Fisheries has commissioned Innovation Norway to expand its reporting to include regularly updated data on how the measures affect business. Innovation Norway has, with assistance from Societal Economic Analysis, also obtained information on schemes other than its own in order to get a more complete picture of the use of measures.
The statistics bank contains statistics on allocations per week from the business-oriented policy apparatus. The statistics bank is updated every month and contains data from week 1 of 2020.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Local authorities have received and distributed funding to support small and medium businesses in England during coronavirus. The datasets cover schemes managed by local authorities: Additional Restrictions Support Grant (ARG) Restart Grant - closed June 2021 Local Restrictions Support Grants (LRSG) and Christmas support payments - closed 2021 Small Business Grants Fund (SBGF) - closed August 2020 Retail, Hospitality and Leisure Business Grants Fund (RHLGF) - closed August 2020 Local Authority Discretionary Grants Fund (LADGF) - closed August 2020 The spreadsheets show the total amount of money that each local authority in England: received from central government distributed to SMEs 20 December 2021 update We have published the latest estimates by local authorities for payments made under this grant programme: Additional Restrictions Grants (up to and including 28 November 2021) The number of grants paid out is not necessarily the same as the number of businesses paid. The data has not received full verification.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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Employee support provided by the business or organization due to COVID-19, by North American Industry Classification System (NAICS), business employment size, type of business, business activity and majority ownership.
The largest volume of governmental support was directed to small- and medium-sized enterprises in Russia in order to overcome the coronavirus-evoked crisis. With over 400 billion Russian rubles, deferred tax and insurance payments for affected SMEs was the type of aid with the highest value of the governmental support.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
This page is no longer updated. It has been superseded by the Business insights and impacts on the UK economy dataset page (see link in Notices). It contains comprehensive weighted datasets for Wave 7 onwards. All future BICS datasets will be available there. The datasets on this page include mainly unweighted responses from the voluntary fortnightly business survey, which captures businesses’ responses on how their turnover, workforce prices, trade and business resilience have been affected in the two-week reference period, up to Wave 17.
Grants provided in Fiscal Year 2021 to businesses, hospitals, tenants/landlords, public municipalities, and community organizations to deliver various forms of relief to impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. Funding for these programs comes from federal and state allocations. Business Oregon continues to update pandemic related materials on its site. Most information can generally be found at https://www.oregon.gov/biz/Covid19ResponseandResources
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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The data published shows the different Covid-19 business support grants paid to eligible businesses and charities by Leicester City Council. The grants were funded by the UK Government.In line with transparency and data protection rules, payments to individuals/sole traders are redacted.Note: £594,298.57 of the LRSG Open Grant was allocated towards the Additional Restrictions Grant allowance.
Coronavirus Business Continuity Solution released.Coronavirus Business Continuity is a collection of maps and apps that can be used by businesses, utilities, and government agencies to maintain business operations and share authoritative information with customers and stakeholders during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.More information..._Communities around the world are taking strides in mitigating the threat that COVID-19 (coronavirus) poses. Geography and location analysis have a crucial role in better understanding this evolving pandemic.When you need help quickly, Esri can provide data, software, configurable applications, and technical support for your emergency GIS operations. Use GIS to rapidly access and visualize mission-critical information. Get the information you need quickly, in a way that’s easy to understand, to make better decisions during a crisis.Esri’s Disaster Response Program (DRP) assists with disasters worldwide as part of our corporate citizenship. We support response and relief efforts with GIS technology and expertise.More information...
More than one third of surveyed business representatives stated that the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak made it easier for their companies to take unpopular decisions in March 2020. Three percent of companies found an advantage in their employees being ready to work for less money.
This table contains payments made to business from federal government COVID-19 support measures which are treated as subsidies on production, at quarterly rates and not seasonally adjusted.
The Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) established by the CARES Act, is implemented by the Small Business Administration (SBA) with support from the Department of the Treasury. The program provided small businesses with funds to pay up to 8 weeks of payroll costs including benefits. Funds could also be used to pay interest on mortgages, rent, and utilities
This dataset details New York State recipients of PPP funds.
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Dataset to support searching Fort Collins COVID Business Support by 'availability'
According to a survey on the evolution of the warehousing sector in Saudi Arabia in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, ** percent of respondents believed that businesses need financial government support after the COVID-19 pandemic. The COVID-19 outbreak caused disparities in the supply and demand, and interferences in the supply chain.
To better understand the impact of the shock induced by the COVID-19 pandemic on micro and small enterprises in Tunisia and assess the policy responses in a rapidly changing context, reliable data is imperative, and the need to resort to a dynamic data collection tool at a time when countries in the region are in a state of flux cannot be overstated. The COVID-19 MENA Monitor Survey was led by the Economic Research Forum (ERF) to provide data for researchers and policy makers on the economic and labor market impact of the global COVID-19 pandemic on enterprises.
The ERF COVID-19 MENA Monitor Survey is constructed using a series of short panel phone surveys, that are conducted approximately every two months, and it will cover business closure (temporary/permanent) due to lockdowns, ability to telework/deliver the service, disruptions to supply chains (for inputs and outputs), loss of product markets, increased cost of supplies, worker layoffs, salary adjustments, access to lines of credit and delays in transportation. Understanding the strategies of enterprises (particularly micro and small enterprises) to cope with the crisis is one of the main objectives of this survey. Specific constraints such as weak access to the internet in some areas or laws constraining goods' delivery will be analyzed. Enterprise owners will also be asked about prospects for the future, including ability to stay open, and whether they benefited from any measures to support their businesses. The ERF COVID-19 MENA Monitor Survey is a wide-ranging, nationally representative panel survey. The wave 2 of this dataset was collected from June to August 2021 and harmonized by the Economic Research Forum (ERF) and is featured as data for enterprise data. The survey is in the process of further expansion to include other waves. The harmonization was designed to create comparable data that can facilitate cross-country and comparative research between other Arab countries (Tunisia, Egypt and Jordan). All the COVID-19 MENA Monitor surveys incorporate similar survey designs, with data on enterprises within Arab countries (Egypt, Jordan, Tunisia and Morocco).
National
Enterprises
The sample universe for the enterprise survey was enterprises that had 6-199 workers pre-COVID-19
Sample survey data [ssd]
The sample universe for the firm survey was firms that had 6-199 workers pre-COVID-19. Stratified random samples were used to ensure adequate sample size in key strata. A target of 500 firms was set as a sample. Up to Five attempts were made to ensure response if a phone number was not picked up/answered, was disconnected or busy, or picked up but could not complete the interview at that time. After the fifth failed attempt, a firm was treated as a non-response and a random firm from the same stratum was used as an alternate.
Morocco: Yellow Pages (no efficient digital copy available; a physical copy was used) o Data organized geographically, not categorically o Three geographic strata used: (1) Casa-Rabat, (2) North, (3) South o The page ranges for the strata were provided. A random page within a stratum was selected, and then a random enterprise on that page (without replacement). o The number of enterprises on the page was recorded and incorporated into the inverse probability weights. o Restricted to enterprises with 6-199 workers in February 2020 based on an eligibility question during the phone interview § sized: 6-9 employees (since APII only covered 10+), 10-49, and 50-199
Computer Assisted Telephone Interview [cati]
The enterprise questionnaire is carried out to understand the strategies of enterprises -particularly micro and small enterprises- to cope with the crisis as well as related constraints and prospects for the future. It includes questions on business closure (temporary/permanent) due to lockdowns, ability to telework/deliver the service, disruptions to supply chains (for inputs and outputs), loss of product markets, increased cost of supplies, worker layoffs, salary adjustments, access to lines of credit and delays in transportation.
Note: The questionnaire can be seen in the documentation materials tab.
Federal government outstanding loan assets as part of COVID-19 business support measures. Data is a stock measure presented at quarter end and is not adjusted for seasonality.
Data on the number and value of grants to small and medium sized businesses (SMEs) in response to the coronavirus pandemic. The spreadsheet shows the total amount of money that each local authority and parliamentary constituency in England has: received from central government distributed to SMEs as at 5 July 2020 31 July 2021: coronavirus grant schemes Local Restrictions Support Grant (LRSG): (Open) Local Restrictions Support Grant (LRSG): (Closed) Additional Restrictions Grant (ARG) - scheme open until 31 March 2022. A final update will be released afterwards Christmas Support Payment (CSP) Restart 5 July 2020: coronavirus grant schemes: Small Business Grants Fund (SBGF) scheme Retail, Hospitality and Leisure Business Grants Fund (RHLGF) Local Authority Discretionary Grant Fund (LADGF)