Makeup artists, tilers, hairdressers to benefit from N26bn Bankers’ Committee loan
December 11, 20171.3K views0 comments
The Bankers’ Committee, an umbrella body of officials of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and managing directors of deposit money banks (DMBs) has adjusted the pricing and disbursement of the special Agric Fund it unveiled early this year to include makeup artists, tilers, and hairdressers.
Godwin Emefiele, CBN governor, disclosed this Sunday while briefing the media after the 9th Bankers Committee Retreat in Lagos. He said the committee has decided that artisans like makeup artists, tillers and hairdressers will benefit from the scheme and that the tenor and pricing of the loan have been reviewed.
Emefiele said the new scheme came after it was observed that farmers are not coming to access the fund and that the Bankers’ Committee deems it fit to channel it towards rejuvenating the SME and small manufacturers’ segments of the economy which he said represent 95 percent of businesses in the country.
Emefiele said the N26 .4 billion fund will be shared into two for both the SME segment and the small manufacturers’ segment.
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The fund came out of the contributions of 5 percent of banks from their annual profit after tax and was initiated last financial year, while the loan, which will now be for a minimum of seven years and will be given to these artisans at five per cent.
In terms of pricing, the Bankers Committee said it should not be more than five per cent for those who are going to have it. But, it would be meant primarily for small businesses. What was agreed was that out of the fund, at least 50 per cent would be set aside for direct SME disbursement.
“By April this year, we were able to put together about N26 billion but as we speak even at this time, not one penny of that fund has been disbursed. It was a shame, according to the views expressed that for a year we will have N26.4 billion sitting in the CBN whereas there are people who needed access to funding,” he said.
Emefiele noted that the Committee decided to reevaluate the conditions under which the facilities were to be made available.
“It was initially meant to be just equity; but we found out that because of certain apathy on the part of people who have businesses and would have wanted to be part of it, most people shied away from the equity fund. So we decided to amend it. The review ended up being an amendment.
“We decided that the fund needed to be reviewed completely. It must be in a way that we must improve access for people who need the facility that it must be done in a very speedy manner, so that those who need it can get it in good time so that they can run their business. Indeed, that this fund must be affordable, and if possible, best possible pricing, so that it can be seen as the contribution of the Bankers’ Committee towards national development,” he explained.
He added: “We also looked at the issue of what would be the tenor of this. We said for SMEs and Agric businesses that want to access this fund, the tenor must be long enough and minimum seven years, providing for a certain moratorium so that those who are going to access the fund can do so at low pricing and at a tenor that would give them ample time to be able to repay.
“Under the direct SME disbursement, we said banks must set up MSME Desks. On the part of the CBN, the central bank has entrepreneurial development centres in the six geo-political zones in the country and that the central bank on its part would make its Enterprise Development Centres available to train people that would benefit from the scheme.”
He said the Bankers’ Committee retreat also looked at the governance principles around the pricing and it was agreed that the fund must be development-oriented and that it must be a non-profit maximisation scheme with a professional and transparent management process around it.
“First, that it should no longer be equity fund and we agreed that we should tweak it so that I would be some form of preference share arrangement or like a debt structure which makes it easy for those who want to access it. In which case every year, banks must contribute. That means the fund would continue to grow,” he said.