Germany to Invest
€10 Billion in Start-Up Support
The German parliament has approved a billion-euro "future fund" to help fledgling companies expand their business.
Early on Friday, after a marathon 17-hour budgetary meeting, the German Bundestag approved a massive investment of state capital to promote start-ups in the country. The 2021 budget will see the government provide €2.4 billion via Germany's developmental bank, the KfW, and other channels to help new and growing companies scale up their activities.
The government has committed to investing a total of €10 billion between next year and 2030. It is hoped that this financial infusion will create an additional €20 billion in private venture capital investments.
Robert Hermann,
the CEO of the German national economic
promotion agency Germany Trade & Invest (GTAI)
Image: GTAI
"The Bundestag has created the necessary budgetary conditions for significantly improving the financing of start-ups in Germany," the president of the Federal Association of German Start-Ups, Christian Miele, told business newspaper Handelsblatt.
Robert Hermann, the CEO of the German national economic promotion agency Germany Trade & Invest (GTAI) welcomed the parliament's decision.
"This is fantastic news," says Hermann. "Business advocates have long called for better access to domestic venture capital for young German companies - a need the governing German cabinet and parliament have now addressed. The allocation of such a large sum shows that amidst all of the economic disruption going on right now, there are significant positive changes as well. For innovative young companies, this could be a very good time to consider expanding to Germany."
Source: GTAI