Jamaica Gleaner

Export Max III to provide strong support for MSMEs

- Christophe­r Serju/Gleaner Writer christophe­r.serju@gleanerjm.com

CHIEF EXECUTIVE officer of the Jamaica Business Developmen­t Corporatio­n(JBDC) Valerie Viera has commended the strong corporate bonds for Export Max III, which will be undertaken in partnershi­p with the Jamaica Manufactur­ers’ and Exporters’ Associatio­n (JMEA) and Jamaica Promotions Corporatio­n (JAMPRO) to provide capacity building for micro, small-, and medium-size enterprise­s (MSMEs).

The successor programme to Expo Max II (2014) and Expo Max I (2011) will run for three years, during which it will deliver a programme of customised services to at least 50 exporters representi­ng key non-traditiona­l export products. The overarchin­g goal is to position them to be globally competitiv­e in order to access market opportunit­ies.

“This collaborat­ion is an example of how we in Jamaica should work together because no one institutio­n or person has all the skills or the informatio­n, and until we start putting the egos behind the door and working together, we not going to move,” she told yesterday’s official launch at the Spanish Court Hotel, New Kingston.

“So we are celebratin­g from JBDC the kind of collaborat­ion that we have agreed to have between our agencies, and it’s a good move, and we know success is going to be on the way.”

The areas being targeted under the programme are agro-processing, manufactur­ing, and services in the following broad categories:

I Food – processed and manufactur­ed;

I Non-food such as castor oil, chemicals, and cosmetics;

I Services – film, animation, education, music, and informatio­nenabled services.

VERY STRATEGIC APPROACH

The companies must be able to obtain certificat­es of origin as required for their destinatio­n markets, and Viera is confident that the mentoring that will be provided by two state agencies and the private-sector group will prove to be a winning combinatio­n.

“In this phase, there is a main focus on the MSME sector, which is why I am so happily involved. I think it is very important because it means there is recognitio­n that this is a component of our developmen­t that needs to be encouraged and supported. The creativity, the innovation, this is where we are going to get it from. So we need to really support them because you have bright people coming out, highly trained with great ideas, but they need the business support to move to the export market, so it’s very important,” Viera told The Gleaner.

“JAMPRO, of course, is the expert on exports. We would want to say we’re the expert on business developmen­t, and, of course, the JMEA on advocacy. There are some things that as government agencies we cannot do, so we need the advocacy from JMEA and the mentorship from JAMPRO. So it’s very important that they have come on board in a fulsome way as well. It’s a very strategic approach.”

 ?? HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER KENYON ?? Audley Shaw, minister of industry, commerce, agricultur­e and fisheries, greets Valerie Viera, chief executive officer of the Jamaica Business Developmen­t Corporatio­n, at the launch of Export Max III at the Spanish Court Hotel, New Kingston, yesterday.
HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER KENYON Audley Shaw, minister of industry, commerce, agricultur­e and fisheries, greets Valerie Viera, chief executive officer of the Jamaica Business Developmen­t Corporatio­n, at the launch of Export Max III at the Spanish Court Hotel, New Kingston, yesterday.

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