BUSINESS INVESTMENT AND INVESTMENT FINANCE IN MALTA EVIDENCE FROM THE EIBIS 2017 SURVEY

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BUSINESS INVESTMENT AND INVESTMENT FINANCE IN MALTA EVIDENCE FROM THE EIBIS 217 SURVEY Article published in the Quarterly Review 218:1, pp. 3-36

BOX 2: BUSINESS INVESTMENT AND INVESTMENT FINANCE IN MALTA EVIDENCE FROM THE EIBIS 217 SURVEY 1 The European Investment Bank (EIB) Group Survey on Investment and Investment Finance (EIBIS) is an -wide, annual survey of 12,5 firms, 178 of which are operating in Malta. It collects data on individual firm characteristics and performance, past and future investment activities, sources of finance, financing and other challenges that businesses face using a stratified sampling methodology. For EIBIS 217, telephone interviews in Malta were carried out between April and June 217. 2 EIBIS 217 shows a rather positive picture of business investment dynamics in Malta, with 84% of firms having invested in 216 and more expecting to increase investment in 217 than expecting to reduce it. 84% of firms reported that they have engaged in investment activities in the previous financial year, in line with the average and 6 percentage points higher than in the EIBIS 216 (see Chart 1). 3 The share is particularly high in the infrastructure sector and in manufacturing, at 94% and 89% respectively. Furthermore, the intensity of investment, defined as the median investment per employee, has increased since the previous survey and it is now higher than the average. When asked about their forecasts for their investment activities for 217, more firms expected an increase in their investments than expected a decrease (see Chart 2). Chart 1 SHARE OF FIRMS INVESTING IN THE LAST FINANCIAL YEAR (1) AND INVESTMENT INTENSITY (per cent; R per employee) 1 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 216 217 1 Prepared by the EIB on the basis of findings for Malta collected through the EIB Group Survey on Investment and Investment Finance (EIBIS). The views expressed are those of the EIB and do not necessarily reflect those of the Central Bank of Malta. Any errors are the authors own. 2 EIB Investment Survey (217), Investment and Investment Finance Country Overview: Malta 217. 3 EIB Investment Survey (216), Investment and Investment Finance Country Overview: Malta 216. MT 216 MT 217 Share of firms investing (%) Investment intensity of investing firms (R per employee) (1) A firm is conisdered to have invested if it spent more than 5 per employee on investment activities. Chart 2 INVESTMENT CYCLE Firms expecting to increase / decrease investment in current financial year (net balance) 2 15 1 5-5 -1-15 -2 Low investment expanding Construction SME 14, 12, 1, 8, 6, 4, 2, -25-3 7 75 8 85 9 95 1 Low investment contracting MT Share of firms investing High investment expanding High investment contracting CENTRAL BANK OF MALTA Quarterly Review 218:1

Such a positive outlook, however, is mostly shared by firms in manufacturing, infrastructure and construction, while the service sector s expectations are for a mild deceleration. Moreover, although investment expectations are overall positive, firms in Malta are more conservative than most of their counterparts (see Chart 3). The investment gap perceived by Maltese firms is lower than the average. However, relatively high capacity utilisation rates indicate that future investment needs remain high. The share of firms that report having invested too little over the last three years has declined from 14% to less than 8% (see Chart 4). Chart 3 INVESTMENT CYCLE FOR ROPE Firms expecting to increase/decrease investment in current financial year (net balance) 25 2 15 1 5 Low investment expanding RO Construction High investment expanding -5 56 61 66 71 76 81 86 91 96 Low investment contracting Share of firms investing Chart 4 PERCEIVED INVESTMENT GAP (1) 1 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 216 217 GR BG MT 216 LT MT 217 LV EE SK HU PT PL ES CY IT DE FR IE HR AT UK MT NL SI BE LU CZ SE DK High investment contracting Do not know/refused Invested too little About the right amount Invested too much * Question: Looking back at your investment over the last three years, was it too much, too little, or EIBIS 217 provides evidence that the particular about the right amount? perceived investment gap is below the average of 15% and makes Malta the country with the lowest share of firms reporting under-investment. Furthermore, the share of firms reporting too much investment declined (from 8% to 5%) and high levels of capacity utilisation also point towards further investment needs. As a matter of fact, 79% of firms report operating at or above maximum capacity, which places Malta substantially above the average of 53% and Malta s rate for 216 at 69% (see Chart 5). 4 As a consequence, the share of firms expecting to focus their investment activities on expanding their capacity, increased from 2% to 3% between the 216 and 217 surveys (see Chart 6). When compared across sectors, the services sector contains the highest proportion of firms operating at or above full capacity 4 Full capacity is the maximum capacity attainable under normal conditions, for example, a company s general practices regarding the utilization of machines and equipment, overtime, work shifts, holidays etc. CENTRAL BANK OF MALTA Quarterly Review 218:1

(86%). Likewise, larger firms are most likely to operate at or above full capacity (85%). EIBIS allows the identification of perceived barriers to investment: lack of staff with the right skills is revealed as a key risk. The vast majority of firms in Malta (94%) consider the lack of skilled staff to be an obstacle to their investment activities, which is much higher than the average of 72% (see Chart 7) and is equally spread across sectors and size classes. Most importantly, 78% of firms consider the lack of skilled staff to be a major barrier for their investments the highest in the European Union. Given the fact that investment in capacity expansion is generally supported by a strong demand for labour, this barrier will almost certainly become an even bigger issue going forward, which could undermine firms ability to realise their investment plans. Firms in Malta are also relatively concerned about the state of transport infrastructure in the country, energy costs and business regulations. Firms in Malta are significantly more likely to name these three areas Chart 5 CAPACITY UTILISATION (1) 1 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 MT 217 216 (1) Question: In the last financial year, was your company operating above or at maxiumum capacity attainable under normal circumstances? Chart 6 FUTURE INVESTMENT PRIORITIES (1) 1 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 216 217 MT 216 MT 217 No investment planned New products Replacement Capacity expansion (1) Question: Looking ahead to the next three years, which is your investment priority? (share of firms by purpose of investment). Chart 7 LONG TERM BARRIERS TO INVESTMENT (1) 1 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Demand for products or services Availability of skilled staff Energy costs Access to digital infrastructure Labour market regulations Business regulations Adequate transport infrastructure Availability of finance Uncertainty about the future MT (1) Question: Thinking about your investment activities in Malta, to what extent is each of the following an obstacle? Is it a major obstacle, a minor obstacle or not an obstacle at all? CENTRAL BANK OF MALTA Quarterly Review 218:1

as obstacles to investment than firms elsewhere in the European Union (see Chart 7). Although this pattern is similar to the pattern observed in the EIBIS 216, transport infrastructure is now more likely to be perceived as an obstacle (by 72% of the firms versus 53% in the last survey wave). Firms consider transport infrastructure and training to be public investment priorities. Respondents were asked to choose between eight areas of public investment as a necessary priority over the next three years. More than one third of the firms (36%) cited transport infrastructure as the priority for investment over the next three years (see Chart 8). This was followed by professional training or higher education (19%) and hospitals and care (12%). It should also be highlighted that the reported figures on transport are consistent across firms and among all the sectors and size groups. It is also one of the highest results in the European Union. It should also be noted that in Malta, a higher share of firms consider public transport and hospitals to be policy priorities than in the European Union. Firms in Malta are conscious of the relevance of investment in intangibles, with a particular preference for software, data, IT and websites. Still, in terms of innovation, they appear more focused on adoption rather than pure innovation. EIBIS 217 indicates that firms in Malta allocated around 36% of their investment outlays to investments in intangibles, 7 percentage points less than the EIBIS 216 (see Chart 9). Moreover, firms in Malta showed a marginally higher propensity to adopt new products, processes or services than the overall, but CHART 8 PERCEIVED PUBLIC INVESTMENT PRIORITIES (1) 1 8 6 4 2 / Micro Transport infrastructure Public transport ICT infrastructure Childcare schools Professional training HE Hospitals care Energy supply distribution Social housing None/Do not know/refused Question: From your business perspective, if you had to prioritise one area of public investment for the next three years, which one would it be? Chart 9 AREAS OF INVESTMENT (1) 1 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 216 217 MT 216 MT 217 MT Organisation/business processes Training of employees Software, data, IT, website R&D Machinery and equipment Land, business buildings and infrastructure (1) Question: In the last financial year, how much did your business invest in each of the following with the intention of maintaining or increasing your company's future earnings (average of responses for allocation by area in percentage)? CENTRAL BANK OF MALTA Quarterly Review 218:1

mostly in the adoption of technologies new to the country and the firm, rather than new to the world (see Chart 1). Access to finance is not a big concern for firms in Malta, with the exception of innovative firms. A minority of firms (6%) are financially constrained (see Chart 11), broadly in line with the average (7%). This dropped from 1% in the EIBIS 216 survey. However, the picture is different for innovative firms (both adopters and inventors). The share of innovative firms that are financially constrained is nearly 9%, which is well above the average for innovative firms (7.5%). Although internal finance and intra-group funding play a strong role (see Chart 12), firms in Malta rely almost exclusively on bank finance to satisfy their external funding needs. Bank loans account for about 83% of total external finance, followed by newly issued bonds (8%) and other bank finance (7%) (see Chart 13). External finance in the form of leasing and factoring, which in the rest of the European Union accounts for about one fourth of total external finance, Chart 1 INNOVATION ACTIVITIES (1) 1 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 216 217 MT 216 MT 217 New to the world New to the firm/country No Innovation (1) Question: What proportion of total investment was used for developing or introducing new products, processes, services? Were the products, processes or services new to the company, new to the country, new to the global market? Chart 11 SHARE OF FINANCIALLY CONSTRAINED FIRMS (1) 2 18 16 14 12 1 8 6 4 2 EL LV LT HR PL PT IT BG IE HU SI NL FI EE CZ AT ES CY DK SK BE UK MT RO FR LU DE SE Rejected Received less Too expensive Discouraged (1) Financially constrained firms include: those dissatisfied with the amount of finance obtained (received less), firms that sought external finance but did not receive it (rejected) and those who did not seek external finance because they thought borrowing costs would be too high (too expensive) or they would be turned down (discouraged). Chart 12 SOURCE OF INVESTMENT FINANCE (1) 1 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 216 217 MT 216 MT 217 Intra-group Internal External (1) Question: What proportion of your investment was financed by each of the following? CENTRAL BANK OF MALTA Quarterly Review 218:1

plays practically no role in Malta, and neither does funding from business angels or venture capitalists in the form of external equity (see Chart 13). Addressing the need for external financing diversification is important. The EIB Investment Report 217/218 (see Chapter 7) provides evidence in favour of a more diversified mix of business finance, highlighting Chart 13 TYPE OF EXTERNAL FINANCE USED FOR INVESTMENT ACTIVITIES (1) 1 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 216 217 that a combination of different sources of finance improves the resilience of the corporate sector and encourages innovation. 5 In addition, there is evidence that more use of equity finance supports the growth of young innovative firms (see Chapter 9), which is a critical factor for supporting competition and productivity growth. Maltese firms complain about collateral conditions and the cost of funding. In particular, firms are more likely to be dissatisfied with the cost of finance (12%) and collateral requirements (9%) than their counterparts (see Chart 14). Nevertheless, the share of firms that are dissatisfied with collateral requirements fell substantially from 22% in EIBIS 216. MT 216 MT 217 Bank loan Other bank finance Bonds Equity Leasing Factoring Non-institutional loans Grants Other (1) Question: Approximately what proportion of your external finance does each of the following represent? In conclusion, the EIBIS 217 results reveal a positive picture of investment dynamics in Malta, but also highlight areas for policy attention. Business investment continues to grow and expectations remain positive. The key risk for a sustained upswing in investment activities in Malta is represented by skill shortages. Nearly nine in ten firms already consider Chart 14 DISSATISFACTION WITH EXTERNAL FINANCE (1) 14 12 1 8 6 4 2 Amount obtained Cost Length Collateral Type of finance Malta (1) Question: How satisfied or dissatisfied are you with the following? 5 EIB Investment Report 217/218, From recovery to sustainable growth. CENTRAL BANK OF MALTA Quarterly Review 218:1

this to be a bottleneck for their investment activities. Moreover, the situation with regard to transport infrastructure, energy dependency and business regulations affect firms in Malta worse than firms in the rest of the European Union. In order to safeguard the positive investment dynamics, it will be important to ensure that the investment carried out translates into productive outcomes. More diversification in available forms of finance to support intangible investment and innovation is also important. From a policy perspective EIBIS 217 suggests that dealing with the problem of skill shortages, together with improving the transport system, working towards lower energy costs and simplifying business regulations, will be key areas to focus on. Furthermore, considering alternative ways to diversify firms financing mix will be additionally important, in order to ensure that investment activities translate into productivity enhancing outcomes. CENTRAL BANK OF MALTA Quarterly Review 218:1