Times of Eswatini

86% MSMEs use personal accounts for business

- BY MHLENGI MAGONGO

MBABANE – One of the challenges hindering MSMEs from acquiring financial assistance is the fact that they use personal accounts for their businesses.

A FinScope Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprise­s (MSME) survey was conducted by the Centre for Financial Inclusion (CFI), and it revealed that there were approximat­ely 60 000 MSMEs in Eswatini.

At least 69 per cent of the MSMEs were discovered to be financiall­y included; 86 per cent use personal accounts to run businesses and only 14 per cent use business accounts to run businesses.

Generating

MSMEs employ about 92 643 people, generating a monthly turnover of E92.5 million within the MSME sector only, and over 75 per cent are at the micro level.

A majority of the MSMEs were found to be at the micro level, and a majority of them did not have business accounts but used personal accounts to run their small enterprise­s, which in turn affected the need to have concise measures to address their needs.

The CFI Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Nomcebo Hadebe, said MSMEs were imperative to the economy of Eswatini as they contribute to the gross domestic product (GDP).

“The contributi­on the sector makes to our national GDP is significan­t, and we can make it even more; some countries have recorded over 50 per cent contributi­ons to GDP.

It is key that we dedicate efforts as a country towards making this sector stronger and more resilient,” she added.

The CEO mentioned that the World Bank Global Financial Developmen­t Report acknowledg­es the important role financial inclusion plays in facilitati­ng developmen­t, especially at the bottom of the pyramid and for the MSME sector in developing countries.

“There is enough evidence that MSMEs that are financiall­y included are better positioned to have their small enterprise­s expand and become bigger businesses in the future. The small enterprise’s history and management of the business bank account come into play when the small business desires to get credit from the financial institutio­n,” she said.

Meanwhile, MSMEs would now be included in every step of the industrial­ization process and drive towards sustainabl­e developmen­t. Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprise­s (MSMEs) can now trade their goods under the AfCFTA market, to which they had no access before.

Champions

This was mentioned by the Minister of Commerce, Industry and Trade, Manqoba Khumalo, who said MSMEs were the champions in the manufactur­ing sector and are equal contributo­rs to the economy.

Khumalo was speaking at the Import Substituti­on Industrial­ization (ISI): Considerin­g ISI and Export-Oriented Industrial­isation (EOI) to Accelerate Intra-Africa Trade and the Expansion of Regional Value Chains seminar.

The Minister said this was the time for Eswatini to take advantage of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area Agreement (AfCFTA), which, if successful­ly implemente­d, was projected to boost the manufactur­ing sector with an annual output of about US$1 trillion by 2025 and create over 14 million jobs.

“The AfCFTAAgre­ement indeed provides opportunit­ies to diversify exports and export markets, increase earnings from traditiona­l and non-traditiona­l exports, improve competitiv­eness, link other sectors like agricultur­e in the country, and deepen regional value chains,” he added.

Khumalo said Eswatini, was forging towards becoming a well-diversifie­d country, presently spread across agricultur­e, manufactur­ing, and mining.

He said COVID-19 had an impact on the economy of the country, he said the economy contracted by about 3.2 per cent in 2020 after growing by 2.2 per cent in 2019. The manufactur­ing sector was equally affected, with export-oriented industries’ activities disrupted.

Worth noting is that the manufactur­ing sector accounts for 37 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP).

“Textiles and sugar are our major exports, and some of our major partners include South Africa, the United States (under the African Growth and Opportunit­y Act) and the EU.”

Growth

“Through leveraging our partnershi­ps, available trade agreements and a focused approach to economic diversific­ation, we have experience­d growth and an inflow of foreign direct investment,” he alluded.

The minister mentioned that Eswatini ratified the AfCFTA agreement and was in the process of formulatin­g its national AfCFTA implementa­tion strategy, with ECA’s technical support.

He said Eswatini benefited from the technical support on developing a financing model for MSMEs to serve the growth of MSMEs in the country.

Khumalo also mentioned that manufactur­ing was the key engine that would drive the industrial­isation process and, thus, structural transforma­tion.

He said this would entail infrastruc­ture with new technologi­es and building skills capacity.

 ?? MHLENGI MAGoNGo) ?? Delegates from different government ministries and parastatal­s after discussing fiNANCIAL INCLusIoN For MSMEs.(PIC
MHLENGI MAGoNGo) Delegates from different government ministries and parastatal­s after discussing fiNANCIAL INCLusIoN For MSMEs.(PIC

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