MaltaToday

.
Vince Farrugia | Sunday, 25 January 2009

Not too late to be fair on rent

In its Bill proposing rent reform, government has decided to abandon enterprise. I mean entrepreneurs – small, medium or large – who invest their money, borrow and re-invest hard-earned returns to turn a dream into a profitable business that employs themselves, their family and other employees and create economic value-added. The entrepreneur creates work through endeavour. He’s not a hoarder or a speculator. He’s a creator of wealth through enterprise.
Jobs do not grow on trees. Many medium and large businesses that thrive today were born years back through the spirit of entrepreneurship that some individuals possessed. Indeed, many businesses started with very little and now they are pillars of success.
Many others did not grow so much, but in their own way they are also successful. These enterprises serviced and continue to service the community faithfully. They are the grocers, minimarkets, supermarkets, the ironmongers, the bars, the butchers, the bazaars, the domestic appliances dealers, the car repairers, bicycle shops and the other shops of all size and form that keep the life in many towns and villages lively and busy. Most have learned to put aside enough to buy their premises, or to start in rented premises and then move out to newly built premises in newer areas.
But not all had the vision, the financial strength or the ability to move. They stayed small while continuing to service the community. They received no assistance from any government and they asked for none. The only business support that existed was the protection from summary eviction by the owner of the premises from were he operated. The law protected the tools of the self employed from confiscation and protected his licensed premises. Nothing else stood as a safeguard for the self-employed and the small business owner.
The law is now changing. Enterprises now will move from absolute protection to no protection at all. This is not correct.
The first question that needs to be asked is why enterprise is no longer protected. There are clauses in the Reform Bill that protect many small enterprises now under perpetual protection till 2010 and others for 20 years, but effectively the protection has been abandoned in principle. Many small businesses have their days numbered. Most have already decided to call it a day, close shop and retire.
The Maltese government and opposition now no longer believe enterprise ought to be protected from eviction beyond what is written in a rent contract. In this they are in a minority in the EU. Most European countries continue to believe that enterprise needs safeguards. That job’s protection remains a priority.
Most other governments in Europe distinguish between property rented for residence purposes, and for that rented for enterprise use. Those who move in rented property and create work for themselves and for others, and provide a service to the community, are given protection. Why assist a foreign investor to open factory in Malta and give no protection at all to a small entrepreneur who wants to manage a small enterprise?
France presents an interesting enterprise promotion policy: come to France, start your own business and you have a minimum nine-year protection at law if in rented property. You take up a garage or other premises, turn it into a business and you have nine years’ protection from eviction. Rented commercial property in France is renewable after nine years and if the rent contract is ended, the tenant owner is guaranteed compensation at law. In the absence of a renewal, landowners have to pay compensation for the value added to the property through the investments of the tenant.
The capital value added that the premises gains after nine years does not belong only to the landlord alone. A garage or any other unlicensed premises grows in value but not as much as a licensed premises with investment and goodwill made and earned by the tenant. The latter appreciates in value much more than the former.
The capital gains after nine years belong to whom? Do they belong to the landlord alone? French law says no. If rent is to be renegotiated, the “gains” given to the property by both the property owner and the tenant owner is recognised and the renegotiated rent is not dictated only by the owner. It is not dictated only by the market value of property in the general property market. The owner could, after nine years, evict the tenant, but he has to pay the capital gains awarded to the building by the tenant owner during the period of his tenancy and reward him/her accordingly.
Because for the French, enterprise matters. It does not grow on trees. Jobs matter. Its entrepreneurs, small, medium or large who create jobs. The law in France protects job creators.
Why are we in Malta abandoning this basic principle? Let’s have rent reform, but let us not forget enterprise. The new reform does not give due recognition to what tenants have contributed. It looks only at what they have gained over the years that rent was protected.
No law can impose without due compensation. A government that rightly compensated dockyard workers, that compensated hearse owners and all others who suffered as a result of government decisions, cannot simply allow small business owners to be kicked out of their enterprise without due compensation. Government and opposition cannot jointly be responsible for this injustice. They are still in time to re-consider and adjust.
It’s never too late to be fair.


Any comments?
If you wish your comments to be published in our Letters pages please click button below.
Please write a contact number and a postal address where you may be contacted.

Search:



MALTATODAY
BUSINESSTODAY




Copyright © MediaToday Co. Ltd, Vjal ir-Rihan, San Gwann SGN 9016, Malta, Europe
Managing editor Saviour Balzan | Tel. ++356 21382741 | Fax: ++356 21385075 | Email