Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

Food outlets, retailers to get help with delivery costs, going online with reintroduced schemes

SINGAPORE — Food outlets and retailers affected by Covid-19 Phase Two (heightened alert) restrictions will get help to offset their delivery costs and to go online with re-introduced government schemes.

Pasir Ris Central Hawker and Food Centre on May 16, 2021, the first day of tighter Covid-19 restrictions.

Pasir Ris Central Hawker and Food Centre on May 16, 2021, the first day of tighter Covid-19 restrictions.

Follow TODAY on WhatsApp

SINGAPORE — Food outlets and retailers affected by Covid-19 Phase Two (heightened alert) restrictions will get help to offset their delivery costs and to go online with re-introduced government schemes.

The food delivery and e-commerce subsidy schemes were first introduced in April last year during Singapore's circuit breaker period when non-essential activities were suspended but they were removed as restrictions eased.

They have been made available again to help businesses diversify their revenue channels and defray costs of going online, trade agency Enterprise Singapore said on Sunday (May 16), the first day the tightened rules kicked in.

The support is available to businesses that are new to digital channels as well as those already selling via food delivery or e-commerce platforms, it added.

FOOD DELIVERY BOOSTER PACKAGE

From now until June 15, Enterprise Singapore will fund 5 percentage points of the commission cost charged by the three food delivery platforms — Deliveroo, Foodpanda and GrabFood.

In the same period, the agency will fund 20 per cent of the delivery costs for food delivery orders made through third-party logistic partners such as Lalamove, Zeek Logistics and Pickupp.

"Collectively, these players serve a large majority of the food delivery market," it said.

To be eligible for the Food Delivery Booster Package, food-and-beverage (F&B) businesses must sell food that was prepared on-premises for immediate consumption. This includes smaller establishments such as hawker stalls and cafes, and larger ones such as food caterers and restaurants.

F&B businesses already on any of the three food delivery platforms will automatically benefit from the lower commission cost. For the rest, they may approach the platforms to find out more.

Before Enterprise Singapore's announcement, Grab said that it will provide full commission rebates for stall owners operating in hawker centres managed by the National Environment Agency. For other food outlets, it will give a 50 per cent rebate on commissions for more GrabFood orders as compared to their current level of sales or previous month's sales.

E-COMMERCE BOOSTER PACKAGE

Retailers will receive a one-time 80 per cent support on qualifying costs for fees charged by e-commerce platforms, capped at S$8,000, until Nov 16.

Enterprise Singapore said that it has collaborated with Shopee and Qoo10 and may add new platforms in future.

Shopee and Qoo10 will work with sellers to curate and list products for at least six months, participate in promotion campaigns, fulfil orders and perform basic data analytics of sales.

Each retailer can apply with only one e-commerce platform with whom it has no existing account.

OTHER SUPPORT MEASURES

Other support measures for businesses include those introduced earlier such as the Temporary Bridging Loan Programme to help companies access working capital. The programme has been extended to Sept 30.

Schemes such as the Productivity Solutions Grant and Enterprise Development Grant, both of which help to lower the costs of digitalisation and other transformation efforts, have also been extended to March 31 next year.

The Government has also increased support for F&B businesses under the Jobs Support Scheme to 50 per cent from the 10 per cent support of wages paid up to June 2021.

Hawker stalls and coffee-shop tenants of government agencies will also get a one-month rental relief.

Singapore tightened safe distancing restrictions from Sunday to June 13 to curb a recent increase in Covid-19 cases in the community.

Group gatherings are capped at two and dining-in at food outlets has been suspended, while working from home will again be the default at workplaces.

Enterprise Singapore's assistant chief executive officer Dilys Boey acknowledged that companies may have concerns about the extra resources required to deal with the tighter Covid-19 restrictions.

"We are providing support through the booster packages to help defray some of these operational costs. More importantly, we urge F&B and retail businesses who have yet to get onboard e-commerce to tap these packages to adapt their business models for online sales," Ms Boey said.

"For those already selling via food delivery or e-commerce platforms, we hope that this support can help them onboard additional platforms to widen their existing sales channels.” CNA

For more stories like this, visit cna.asia

Related topics

Covid-19 coronavirus Enterprise Singapore retail business e-commerce

Read more of the latest in

Advertisement

Advertisement

Stay in the know. Anytime. Anywhere.

Subscribe to get daily news updates, insights and must reads delivered straight to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TODAY newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.