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Action Plan for Jobs - Taoiseach, Tánaiste, Bruton

Yearly “Jobs MOU” to contain quarterly targets for implementation; monitoring group to oversee delivery

The Government has committed to deliver a multi-annual Action Plan for Jobs, with quarterly targets for delivery every year and a monitoring group to oversee implementation, in a new departure in government policy in order to address the jobs crisis. The measure was one of a series agreed at a special Cabinet meeting on employment today.

The Government recognises the crucial need, in order to address the jobs crisis, for an ambitious programme of job-creating and pro-growth measures alongside the restructuring of the public finances and banking systems.

In January the Government will publish its first annual Action Plan for Jobs, which will contain a series of measures from across the entire range of Government activity to be implemented during 2012, with quarterly targets to be hit. It will be a whole of Government process, and all Departments will be involved.

Reporting into the Cabinet Committee on Economic Recovery and Jobs, an implementation group consisting of representatives from the Department of the Taoiseach, the Department of Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation and Forfás will be charged with ensuring that these targets are achieved.

Government this week discussed a wide range of initiatives that will be contained in January’s Action Plan for Jobs. These include three measures to help combat the problems that businesses at all levels face in accessing credit:

  • Government sanctioned the establishment of a Micro Finance Loan Fund to generate up to €100million in additional micro-enterprise lending which will benefit over 5,000 businesses over a ten year period. The Fund will be in place in the first quarter of 2012
  • The establishment of a Temporary Partial Credit Guarantee Scheme. Minister Bruton will now proceed to draft legislation and shortly appoint an operator for the Scheme which will also be in place in the first quarter of next year. The scheme will be demand-led, and for every €100million guaranteed will benefit over 1200 businesses, and provide at least €15million in net benefit to the exchequer.
  • A second call worth approximately €60million under Innovation Fund Ireland also to take place in Q1 2012, after the recent finalisation of the capital budgets of Department of Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation.

The Tánaiste also announced the agreement by Government of a series of measures arising from the Global Irish Forum.

Other measures sanctioned by Government include a series of measures arising from the recommendations of the Report of the Small Business Advisory Group presented by Minister for Small Business John Perry to the Taoiseach yesterday.

Read the press release on the Report of the Small Business Advisory Group.

Making the announcement, the Taoiseach said:

The Government’s top priority is jobs and it was the sole focus of today’s Cabinet budget meeting. The challenge for all of us is to bring our national finances under control in a manner that still supports jobs and enterprise. During this budget process the guiding principle when taking decisions has been to support jobs and growth. To this end will be keeping our commitment that there will be no increases in income tax. But we also need to be ambitious for the future and so the target of Government remains creating 100,000 extra jobs by 2015. This will be part achieved by delivering on my promise to make Ireland the best small country in the world to do business.

The Tánaiste said:

Creating jobs and restoring economic growth are the Government’s highest priorities.  Today’s cabinet meeting was an important opportunity to review our progress in this area, and to progress a number of important initiatives.  The particular initiatives that we are announcing today are important components in our overall strategy to promote enterprise and innovative companies, and will make a significant contribution to the development of the enterprise sector.

Jobs Minister Richard Bruton said:

This Government recognises that alongside the adjustments to the public finances, which we must make in order to reclaim our sovereignty, we must also crucially implement measures, which will make it easier for job-creating businesses to expand, grow and create the jobs we so badly need. Government does not create jobs, people and businesses do. That is why, in these difficult times, we must implement a series of radical reforms in order to make it easier for those businesses to create jobs. We must put indigenous businesses at the core of our job-creation strategy. We must build on clusters of strength and remove barriers to help companies be more innovative and win new markets. Today Government agreed the first steps in a new process to deliver on that.

This Government is highly ambitious about the number of jobs we must create in Ireland and the growth we can achieve, and we have set ourselves tough targets not only to exit this crisis but to become world leaders. The Taoiseach is determined that we will become the best small country in Europe in which to do business by 2016; I have said before that we should aim to have two million people back at work by 2020, and also set ambitious targets for exports and competitiveness.

Read the full press release here.

Listen to the Taoiseach's statement from the press conference today below...

Listen to Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore's statement below...

Listen to Minister Richard Bruton's statement below...