NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Mutsvangwa pushes for creation, strengthen­ing of SME credit co-operatives

- BY TAFADZWA MHLANGA

GOVERNMENT plans to form and strengthen small-to-medium enterprise­s (SMEs) credit co-operatives to help them source funding, a Cabinet minister has said.

Credit co-operatives are organisati­ons owned and controlled by its members who can borrow at low interest rates from an amount of money they have saved as a group.

SMEs have struggled to access funding from banks as they do not have the required collateral demanded by financial institutio­ns.

Speaking at the inaugural threeday Zimbabwe Chamber of SMEs Strategic Conference that kicked off yesterday in Chiredzi. Women Affairs, Community, Small and Medium Enterprise­s minister Monica Mutsvangwa said the ministry would facilitate­s managerial and technical skills training for SMEs.

“My ministry is also facilitati­ng the formation and strengthen­ing of savings and credit cooperativ­es to assist communitie­s in pooling resources for onward lending members,” Mutsvangwa said, in a speech read on her behalf by the ministry’s chief director Francis Gondo

She said the ministry was set to adapt to the business dynamic in the market while also noting that it was also working on facilitati­ng partnershi­ps between the SMEs, the private sector, and developmen­t partners.

“SMEs, particular­ly those in urban areas, face workspace challenges and the government is collaborat­ing with local authoritie­s, developmen­t partners, and private investors to develop infrastruc­ture for MSMEs to build, operate, and transfer or build their own,” she said.

“The government has also availed funding to construct SME workplaces and other projects which have been initiated in Gweru in the Midlands, Gwanda in Matabelela­nd South, Chirundu in Mashonalan­d West and Chikomba in Mashonalan­d East.”

Mutsvangwa noted that the ministry was working closely with the Standards Associatio­n of Zimbabwe to train MSMEs on internatio­nal standards compliance.

“The government is also promoting standardis­ation and quality assurance as a means for SMEs to have a competitiv­e edge, and as such the ministry is working closely with the Standards Associatio­n of Zimbabwe on quality assurance, as well as product and system certificat­ion to assist MSMEs in complying with internatio­nal standards,” she noted.

Zimbabwe Chamber of SMEs national secretary general Valencio Kurauone said the chamber was eying some partnershi­ps to aid in solving the workplace imbalances in the country from the conference.

Kurauone told NewsDay Business that said the chamber was working on partnershi­ps with local authoritie­s and the private sector to build enough workplaces across the country.

“So, at this conference, we are working on local authoritie­s’ partnershi­ps and public-private partnershi­ps with the local authoritie­s in trying to identify and solve the workspace imbalance,” he said.

“The local authoritie­s give us land, the SMEs provide the human capital, the banks provide the funding and we do it so that we can accommodat­e our SMEs.”

He noted that more needs to be done to improve the operations of the SMSs for the country to attain Vision 2030.

The Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce estimates the informal sector to be valued at US$42 billion.

 ?? ?? Women Affairs, Community, Small and Medium Enterprise­s Developmen­t minister Monica Mutsvangwa
Women Affairs, Community, Small and Medium Enterprise­s Developmen­t minister Monica Mutsvangwa

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