About ART
What is ART?
ART is a CDFI (Community Development Financial Institution) , based in
The Need
ART is needed to fill gaps in the conventional finance market. It fills a niche between bank lending, grant funding and charitable donations. Its remit is to help create local jobs for local people.
Loans
ART lends between £10,000 and £50,000 to businesses and social enterprises in
Borrowers
ART's portfolio of borrowers include limited companies, partnerships, sole traders and registered charities. It has supported both innovative start-ups and established enterprises in a range of sectors - manufacturing, services, the care industry. education.
Investors
Private individuals and corporate companies can invest between £250 and £20,000 in ART. Their return is social rather than finanical. As ART is accredited by the DTI, investments may qualify for Community Investment Tax Relief (CITR), which offers 5% per annum of the amount invested off personal or corporation tax liabilities for a maximum of five years. This is equivalent to a 6.3% return over five years, which compares favourably with many savings accounts.
Individual and corporate investments provide a base from which ART is able to attract additional funds from a variety of public and private sector sources.
All money invested in ART is used to provide loans. As these are repaid the money is reinvested in more loans.
For more information on becoming an investor please click here
History
The need for ART was first identified by the Aston Commission, a community initiative involving local groups, voluntary sector organisations and business, which identified the problems faced by Aston Ward in inner city
This was followed by a lengthy design and development stage during which inspiration was drawn from the successful Community Development Loan Fund movement in the
A donation of £40,000 from the Barrow Cadbury Fund created a guarantee fund to underwrite loans and ART was launched in 1997. Its loan fund was built initially by socially directed individuals and during its first year, ART raised £300,000 in this way.
Banks, housing associations and businesses followed, all with the desire to promote social and economic outcomes from their investments. Operational help came with revenue support from Barclays and NatWest, including staff secondments through Business in the Community.
After earlier support during the development and feasibility stages, ART gained momentum with more support from Birmingham City Council, local area regeneration initiatives and the Energy Saving Trust.
ART is an independent organisation and a social enterprise, being constituted as a mutual society, that aims to be sustainable in the long term. The balance sheet from its latest Annual Report shows that it is in a healthy position financially, despite being designed to take greater risks with its lending, and therefore incurring greater write-offs, than the banks.
Individual and corporate investments provide a base from which ART is able to attract additional funds from a variety of public and private sector sources.
Key Achievements
From June 1997 to August 2007 ART has
· Made over 340 loans
· Lent over £5.85m
· Helped member borrowers create or safeguard 2,800 jobs
Social
In 1999, ART accessed European funding for a Key Loan Fund dedicated to supporting social enterprises in deprived areas that had been unable to obtain finance from commercial sources. An in-depth, independent evaluation at the end of this project recognised significant achievement by ART in shaping the futures of progressive social enterprises by delivering responsible loans at affordable cost.
Contributions to Policy Research
Steve Walker, Chief Executive of ART since its inception, has just completed a six year term as a member of the National Small Business Investment Task Force, which advises the Small Business Service and the Government on access to finance issues for enterprise. He is also a member of the Regional Finance Forum at Advantage West Midlands.
ART has contributed to, and featured in, policy research, including:
· The Financing of Social
· Enterprising Communities: Wealth Beyond Welfare – a report from the Social Investment Task Force – October 2002
· Finance for Small Firms – Bank of
· Enterprising Communities: A tax incentive for community investment – a consultation document – HM Treasury – March 2001

