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SUPPORTING SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES (SMEs) IN AFRICA THE ROLE OF CREDIT GUARANTEE SCHEMES SEMINAR: CHALLENGES OF BORDERLESS SME MARKETS IN DEVELOPING ECONOMIES:- THE ROLE OF CREDIT GUARANTEE CORPORATIONS. (INDONESIA ASSOCIATION OF GUARANTEE CORPORATIONS) VENUE: DATE: BALI, INDONESIA 16TH - 20TH NOVEMBER 2015 PRESENTED BY : ZAC BENTUM TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION - AFRICA AT A GLANCE CHARACTERISTICS /CHALLENGES OF SME’S IN AFRICA WHY CREDIT GUARANTEES BENEFITS OF CREDIT GUARANTEE SCHEME GUARANTEE MODELS FORMS OF CREDIT GUARANTEE SCHEMES CASE STUDIES AFRICAN GUARANTEE FUND GUARANTEE FUND FOR PRIVATE INVESTMENT IN WEST AFRICA ( GARI) AGRICULTURAL CREDIT GUARANTEE SCHEMES – NIGERIA EXIMGUARANTY COMPANY GHANA LIMITED CONCLUSIONS INTRODUCTION • • • • • • • • • AFRICA AT A GLANCE Population of Africa 54 sovereign states Population growth rate GDP of Africa GDP growth GDP per capita Contribution of Agric to GDP Contribution of Agric to Employment Financial services industry : 1.2 billion : : + 2% : US$2,449 billion : 5.2% : US$2320 : 32% : 65% : US$107 billion AFRICA AND THE WORLD Indicators Population (bn) GDP (US$ billion) GDP Growth (%) World 7.3 77,302 3.8 Europe 0.7 22,804 Asia 4.2 25,374 0.4 5.2 5.5 10,153 27,525 6,090 Poverty % ≤ US$ 1.00 - - - 1.2 2,449 7.9 10,880 Africa 4,473 1.1 GDP per capital (US$) Ext Debt % GDP South America - 2,320 39 60.7 CHARACTERISTICS/CHALLENGES OF SME’S IN AFRICA • CHARACTERISTICS: • • • • • • • • • • • • • Small and Medium Enterprises (SME’s) account for more than 95% of all firms in Africa. Engine/Drivers of growth : Economic Social Poverty alleviation SMEs are wealth-creators SMEs account for SMEs in Africa usually start with 1-4 employees and do not expand beyond 10 employees. Eg. “of a study of 116 firms – Nigeria over a 30 year period, only 2 of 21 firms that originally had fewer than 10 employees graduated above that number ref. Kirby (1993). SMEs in Africa do not survive for a long time. A study conducted over a 30 year period on SMEs in Eastern Nigeria showed that 50% of those SMEs did not make the 50th year mark. Ref: Onyeiwu (1992) SME failure rate is 75% in South Africa. Ref: Okawale and Garwe (2010) SME growth is influenced by owner/manager characteristics eg. Age, education and previous experience CHALLENGES: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Lack of access to finance Lack of adequate collateral 150% Insufficient government support High interest rate Lack of information technology/systems Lack of managerial/experience/business skills Lack of training Poor infrastructure – roads, telecom, electricity, water supply etc. Lack/bad credit history Information asymmetry High tax regimes/inflation Cumbersome legal regimes - licensing Access to markets Ghanaian example oil/gas industry WHY CREDIT GUARANTEES: These challenges create obstacles to the SME growth and do not make them attractive to the financing community. Empirical evidence have shown that in economies where there is ease of access to credit (ie to SMEs) high economic growth have been recorded. BANK LENDING TO PRIVATE SECTOR (SMEs) High - Income Countries PERCENTAGE (%) OF GDP 168% Middle -Income Countries 83% Low - Income Countries 43% Because the challenges of lack of access to finance for the SMEs is primarily due to weaknesses in the enabling environment, African government have therefore found it imperative and are motivated to devise structures and mechanisms that afford the private sector/SMEs easy access to credit. A catalyst that increases bank financing to SMEs. One such scheme is a “Credit Guarantee Scheme” for SMEs. A scheme in which a third party (the government) undertakes to settle the credit taken by a borrower in case of default. BENEFITS OF CREDIT GUARANTEE SCHEME:• Protect the interest of the lender (ie Bank/Financing institution) from the chance of non-payment by the borrower/SME. • Facilitates access to credit • Eliminates the need for collateral • Ensures proper project appraisal since the financing institution takes a share of the risk (partial guarantees) • Identifies clear cash flow pattern of the SME GUARANTEE MODELS:• • - Individual loan guarantees CGS provider assesses the loan after a referral by the Bank. Portfolio guarantees they rely on the bank’s loan approval processes more flexible target borrower/loan faster utilization FORMS OF CREDIT GUARANTEE SCHEMES Coverage: • Regional • National • Sectorial Funding: • Donor sponsored • Specialized eg GARI • Regional eg AGF • National eg Exim/ACGS CASE STUDIES: CS 1. AFRICAN GUARANTEE FUND – a market friendly Guarantee Scheme for African SMEs founded in June 2012. • Funded by AfDB with Spain and Denmark as partners • Location: Nairobi, Kenya • Guarantees: » Portfolio/individual » Bank fund raising » Equity • Capacity Building • Products : » SME financial product offering » Bankable SME segment » Banks appraisal capacity CS 1. AGF (contd) • Guarantee Capital - US$50m / US$66m • Target:- To generate approximately US$2billion of new lending. - 10,000 African SMEs (per 5year Strategy Plan) As per their 2014 Accounts: • Guarantee Portfolio: US$171m • SMEs supported: 300 • Countries: 23 • Average Financing Tenor: 55 months • Available Financing: US$400m CS 2. GUARANTEE FUND FOR PRIVATE INVESTMENTS IN WEST AFRICA (GARI) • • • • • • • • Incorporated : 1994 Funded : – French Development Agency (AFD) – European Investment Bank (EIB) – Deutsch Development Organisation (DEG) – Secrѐtariated’Etatàl’Econome (SECO) – 23 Commercial Banks Location : Lome, Togo Coverage : ECOWAS Region Guarantee Capital: US$26m Maximum Coverage: 60% - 75% Maximum Cover: US$6m Target : » Start ups » Modernisation » Capacity upgrade » Restructuring CS 2. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • GARI (contd) Tenor : 60 months (2 -10years) Acceptance Rate : 70% Applications approved : 361 Guarantee amounts : US$700 Available financing : US$1.8billion (14 Countries including): Ivory Coast Togo Ghana Benin Senegal Burkina Faso Niger Nigeria Cameroon Sierra Leone These interventions no doubt has had a very positive impact in the African region but a lot still needs to be done. The presentation does not give the number of jobs or employment created or sustained because data in this area is sketchy, but it can be reasonably assumed that the numbers are high. CS 3. AGRICULTURAL CREDIT GUARANTEE SCHEME - NIGERIA Nigeria: The Agriculture Credit Guarantee Scheme (ACGS) In Nigeria, like most of Africa, the activity in agriculture sector is by SMEs. Financing SMEs in the Agric Sector is probably even worse than financing other SME activity for example in Commerce. Bank lending to the Agric Sector %: 2012 - 2014 Agric as a percentage of total Bank lending 4.0% Reasons for this lack of support is the same as stated for the SME sector in general but more emphasis on: • Lack of required technology and infrastructure • Inability to assess and price the risk associated with agric sector CS 3. ACGS (contd) Agric however has a high potential in Nigeria and Africa • Agric Employment : 65% • Population Growth Rate : 2.5% • Agric Share of Non-Oil Exports : 70% • Total Land Area : 98.3m Hectares • Cultivable Land Area : 84.0m Hectares (40% utilized) • Large Internal Market :170 million people (2.5% growth rate) • Large Surface Market (with untapped irrigation potential): 279 billion cubic meters. Nigeria’s Top Agric Imports: (World largest importer of US Wheat, World 2nd largest importer of Rice) • Wheat US$ • Rice US$ • Sugar US$ • Fish US$ With this huge potential and the apparent lack of support from the financing institutions, the Government intervened with known policies to include the establishment of the ACGS in order to mitigate these deficiencies and afford SMEs the needed credit guarantees to access the much needed credit to help overturn the current trend. CS 3. Established in Funded ACGS (contd) : : 1977 Central Bank of Nigeria 40% Federal Government of Nigeria 60% Guarantee Capital : US$ 30 million Target Coverage : 75% maximum Maximum Single Coverage : US$ 250,000 (N50m) Coverage : 900,000 farmers Guaranteed Portfolio : US$ 370m (N75billion) CS 4. EXIMGUARANTY COMPANY GHANA LIMITED Incorporated Funded : : Location Coverage Guarantee Capita Maximum Coverage Target : : : : : 1994 Bank of Ghana, Ecobank, National Investment Bank, Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) and Ministry of Finance. Accra (Kumasi/Takoradi) National US$10,million 75% All sectors CS 4. Avg Tenor Acceptance Rate Applications Approved Guarantee amounts Available financing SME supported EXIM (contd) : : : : : : 18 – 24 months 65% 5,617 GH¢359,326,836 = US$100m 1,000 CONCLUSION The impact and success of African Credit Guarantee Schemes to assist SME access credit has been dependent on. 1. Size of the Fund - Credit Guarantee Schemes should maintain adequate economic and guarantee funds commensurate with the risks they undertake. 2. Good Corporate Governance – This would enable credit guarantee schemes operate effectively and efficiently and be accountable for the management of resources. 3. Effective Risk Management Practices - This would guide the underwriting processes as well as ensuring effective internal audit function. 4. Credit Reporting/Reference Institutions - Introduction of credit bureau in the financial system, reduces the information asymmetry issues. 5. The establishment of an efficient collateral registry. Deposit protection scheme – This ensures an appropriate legal framework for the financial markets. CONCLUSION (contd) It is also important to recognise the impact in terms of: • Additionality • Sustainability • Increased volume of lending to SME sector. • Catalysed ventures into new markets. • Renewed understanding /partnership between CGS and Banks to SME financing. THANK YOU