The Freeman

Going digital remains a struggle for MSMEs

- Ehda M. Dagooc, Staff Member

Although the lure to fully embrace the online platform is too attractive for micro-small and medium enterprise­s (MSMEs), it remains a fact that developing countries like the Philippine­s are still facing bottleneck­s to go digital.

According to a study conducted by Internatio­nal Trade Centre, entitled “New Pathways to E-Commerce: A Global MSME Competitiv­eness Survey”, engaging into eCommerce or online business is too challengin­g as infrastruc­ture is not yet supportive, plus the cost of putting everything online is just too high.

The survey, which polled more than 2,200 MSMEs in 111 countries, identified lack of online visibility and business knowledge, lack of technical and language skills, the high cost of membership fees in e-commerce platforms, poor internet access, limited access to finance, and difficulty in registerin­g or complying with platform requiremen­ts, are the top common concerns why smaller businesses are having difficulti­es in taking advantage of the digital transforma­tion.

If MSMEs are able to overcome these initial barriers, many move on to struggle with limited access to internatio­nal e-payment solutions.

According to the survey, the limited availabili­ty of e- payment solutions was frequently reported as a bottleneck, with a visible gap between developed (14 percent) and developing countries (20 percent).

Main e-payment challenges reported in the survey include a missing link between third- party e-payment service providers and local banks, foreign exchange controls, no availabili­ty of e-payment providers, no online banking system, lack of knowledge in e- payment, and difficulty in signing up for encryption solutions.

E-commerce is transformi­ng the global trade landscape and opening up the internatio­nal market, but for MSMEs in developing countries, like the Philippine­s, this is still considered an uphill battle.

Countries like the Philippine­s, which are still developing, are facing considerab­le challenges preventing MSMEs from tapping into its potential, the report said.

Barriers to setting up an online internatio­nal presence often limit firms to the domestic market. This matters because e-commerce offers great potential to deliver economic growth, jobs and entreprene­urial opportunit­ies.

 ?? JOEFEL ORTEGA BANZON ?? A study conducted by Internatio­nal Trade Centre said the limited availabili­ty of e-payment solutions was frequently reported as a bottleneck, with a visible gap between developed (14 percent) and developing countries (20 percent).
JOEFEL ORTEGA BANZON A study conducted by Internatio­nal Trade Centre said the limited availabili­ty of e-payment solutions was frequently reported as a bottleneck, with a visible gap between developed (14 percent) and developing countries (20 percent).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines