Ireland will allow firms impacted by the coronavirus crisis to warehouse tax liabilities for 12 months, offering a "lifeline" as part of an additional package of business supports that could reach €6.5 billion (Dh26.3bn), the government announced on Saturday. Commercial rates will also be written off for three months, a €2bn credit guarantee scheme introduced for small and medium sized businesses and a mandate for Ireland's sovereign wealth fund to invest €2bn directly into bigger firms, finance minister Paschal Donohoe said in a statement. After a lockdown to stop the spread of Covid-19, Ireland laid out a roadmap on Friday for a gradual re-opening of the economy that could allow building sites and some retailers to reopen in two weeks, with restaurants following in June, hotels in July and pubs in August. The government concentrated its initial €8bn fiscal response on increased jobless payments and wage subsidies for workers, with €1bn of liquidity supports offered to reeling firms. The much larger package on Saturday also included a €10,000 restart grant for micro and small businesses. Ireland's main business lobby, IBEC, welcomed the measures as an important further step in addressing the cashflow crisis facing many. Highlighting the scale of the economic shock, Mr Donohoe said firms had deferred €800 million of tax in March alone and that that figure could reach €2bn by June. He also hoped the Ireland Strategic Investment Fund's (ISIF) new equity fund would lead to investment far in excess of the €2bn available capital as it will seek to maximise added capital from existing shareholders and new co-investors. While jobs minister Heather Humphries said more support will be needed for sectors that will find the coming months harder than others, Mr Donohoe said the acting government had not yet considered any potential sector-specific cut to VAT rates. Hotels, restaurants and pubs, which will only be allowed operate at limited capacity when they open, have called for the VAT rate for the hospitality sector to be temporarily cut to zero from 13.5 per cent and for state funds to help them pay rent. Mr Donohoe said a new government would be required to enact the tax deferral and credit guarantee schemes, the first tangible sign that the political deadlock since an election in February could directly hurt business if it cannot be broken. Mr Donohoe's Fine Gael and rival Fianna Fail parties are trying to find enough support from smaller parties to form a coalition. No new legislation can be passed until a new government is formed and selects the remaining members of the upper house of parliament. "It is very clear to me that there are economic decisions that our country will need relevant to keeping jobs and creating new jobs that in the coming weeks will require the election of a new Taoiseach (prime minister)," he told a news conference.