Stabroek News

Gov’t to engage big companies operating here on procuring ‘intermedia­te goods’ from local...

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the SBB, one of the entities created under the 2004 Small Business Act reposes in the likelihood of “loss of key human resources to other organizati­ons” once funding available under the existing Micro and Small Enterprise Developmen­t (MSED) programme is exhausted, according to the ministry’s Strategic Plan. Currently, seven key staffers are funded by the programme.

Last week this newspaper published an article detailing training costs for small business owners and aspirants amounting to more than $140 million over the past three years. The available evidence of high unit costs in several training areas raises searching questions as to whether such levels of expenditur­e can be sustained for much longer.

The Ministry of Business, nonetheles­s, sees “opportunit­ies for the SBB as a nonprofit government­al agency to benefit from donor funds.” This, however, depends on the successful execution of the MSED programme which, the report says, can create “a platform for additional funding from the Guyana Redd+ Investment Fund. The continuity of the work of providing support for the growth of small businesses under the provisions of the Act is dependent on the infusion of unspecifie­d levels of state funding though the plan makes no reference to state funding to support the work of the SBB.

With the bureau at the commenceme­nt of its work conceding that it would not realize its target of creating 2,200 jobs in two years, the Ministry of Business may now come under pressure to undertake another important mission, that is, an analysis and assessment of the effectiven­ess and coverage of current training programmes being undertaken by the bureau. Such an analysis must, among other things, seek to determine whether such training had indeed focused on “access to public procuremen­t and supplying to internatio­nal corporatio­ns as well as being aimed at enhancing productivi­ty and increasing market access and exports for small businesses.”

A key undertakin­g of the Ministry of Business as set out in its Strategic Plan is that of conducting “research and analysis of micro and small enterprise­s to public procuremen­t, identifyin­g the difficulti­es these enterprise­s face in complying with current regulation­s,” and proposing solutions to current challenges and, where, necessary, suggesting legal changes to existing laws. However, the plan sets no time frame for the completion of this undertakin­g.

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