Recently, the Nigerian-British Chamber of
Commerce (NBCC) called on
the Federal Government to adequately fund small businesses in 2016 in
order to achieve price stability and increase aggregate output in the
Nigerian economy. According to the chamber, the Federal Government
should develop policies that will enhance accessibility of funds to
these enterprises in order to leapfrog Nigeria’s industrial development
and create much-needed jobs for the teeming unemployed.
We are totally in support of this call, even as we advice that the
Federal Government embrace it in all entireties. It is a fact that small
and medium enterprises are the engine of economic growth in any
developed and developing society. The major advantage of the sector is
its employment potential at low capital cost, even as the labour
intensity of the SME sector is much higher than that of the large
enterprises. Unarguably, the role of these enterprises in the economic
and social development of Nigeria cannot be overemphasised.
Most importantly, the SME sector is a nursery of entrepreneurship, often
driven by individual creativity and innovation. As the engine of
economic progress, small and medium enterprises are also the main
driving force behind poverty reduction, wealth creation, income
distribution and reduction in income disparities. Moreover, in a country
like Nigeria with an adverse balance of payment situation, the growing
contribution of the small scale industries sector in the export
portfolio goes a long way in generating foreign exchange and smoothening
out the adverse balance of payment situation.
This is important to the economy in that large percentage of their
production inputs are sourced locally thus, reducing the pressure on the
limited foreign exchange earnings, thereby helping to eliminate some of
the deficit in the balance of payment. Even at that, it is praiseworthy
that successive administrations were not oblivious of the place of SME
in the country’s development. Hence, the establishment of micro-finance
banks to act as source of funds for them. Such policy is geared towards
enhancing the operation of small-scale businesses through fiscal
monetary, and export incentives that included tax holidays and tariff
concession.
In terms of monetary support, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)
introduced credit guidelines requiring commercial and merchant banks to
allocate a portion of their loanable funds to small businesses. In spite
of these efforts, experts have worried that funds for small and medium
enterprises had always been misappropriated because majority of the
loans were granted in most cases on political rather than on commercial
or project viability considerations.
In the end, those with little or no political connections are sidelined.
Due to this, many SME’s resort to informal sources of finance, which
include personal saving and borrowing from friends, families and credit
associations? More painful is that formal financial institutions like
commercial banks are still very unwilling to grant credits to SMEs.
Another inhibiting factor is the improper implementation of policies and
inability to recruit trained manpower and adequate equipments to aid
the extension services to support the SMEs. Added to this, is the
challenge of inadequate infrastructural facilities such as electricity,
potable water, feeder roads, that have remained drawbacks to growth of
these enterprises. With evidence of success in countries like India,
Indonesia and Malaysia where SMEs constitute more than 40 percent of the
Gross Domestic Product, those in Nigeria could become models if
enabling policies are well implemented.
Source- Dailytimes.com.ng

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