Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Govt set to improve accessibil­ity of Dimaf 2

- Dumisani Nsingo Senior Business Reporter

THE Government is looking forward to improving accessibil­ity of the Distressed and Marginalis­ed Areas Fund (Dimaf) II, as well as managing finances for the beneficiar­ies of the facility to effectivel­y improve their productivi­ty.

Industry and Commerce Minister Dr Mike Bimha said the Government was working on improving the flexibilit­y of Dimaf following an outcry by most companies that cited its conditions as punitive when the facility was introduced about seven years ago.

He, however, could not be drawn to divulge when the facility would be unveiled only saying: “it’s on the cards”. Dimaf failed to fully attain its objectives largely due to insufficie­nt funding and stringent requiremen­ts which companies were to meet before accessing the money.

It was initiated in 2010 to help companies retool while disburseme­nt started in 2011. The Government and Old Mutual were supposed to inject funds into the project. Old Mutual’s subsidiary, CABS manages the facility.

A total of 48 companies, about half of them from Bulawayo received loans worth $28 million from Dimaf between 2011 and 2014.

Companies hardest hit by the economic challenges of the past decade were mainly located in Bulawayo, once the country’s industrial hub that employed thousands of people.

“Dimaf as you know is handled by the private sector. It’s the private financiers who have been handling that. Our role was to ask them to put a fund to assist industry. There are companies that have been assisted and I think Cairns (Foods) is one of those companies, which virtually benefited in a positive manner and it helped to improve its capacity utilisatio­n. There were successful stories but there were also unsuccessf­ul stories,” said Dr Bimha.

Cairns Foods which is a unit of food manufactur­ing firm Cairns Holding Limited managed to acquire and install a new baked beans line at its Mutare factory using a $1 million loan facility it sourced from Dimaf last year. This follows the acquisitio­n of new packing machines on chip line installed at its Harare factories in December two years ago using funds from Dimaf.

However, Dimaf continues to be a contentiou­s issue with some companies in the designated areas complainin­g that accessing the fund was almost impossible.

Previously, the minimum requiremen­ts for companies to qualify to access the funds included two years accounts in the form of management accounts or financial accounts, acceptable collateral, clean tax records, projection­s for capital expenditur­e loans, budgets and cash flows, among others.

“There were complaints by some of the companies that it wasn’t easy to access those funds and that some of the requiremen­ts for you to be considered were difficult to achieve. For example they wanted you to produce a financial statement for the past five years and some of the companies had no financial statements to produce and even if they produced it, it was just losses and losses so it was not user friendly and what we want is to look at Dimaf II,” said Dr Bimha.

He said efforts were being made to ensure that the fund was being modelled in a way in which conditions for borrowing are specifical­ly designed to suit ailing entities as well as ensuring the capital injection improves the beneficiar­ies’ capacity utilisatio­n through recommendi­ng experts to administer and manage the finances.

“We want to look at improving Dimaf in terms of accessibil­ity, the size of the fund and also to put another aspect of expertise given to those companies that get help because you might get the help in terms of finances but you also need help in managing that money . . . so we are working on that, its work in progress. We are working with business associatio­ns and financial institutio­ns,” said Dr Bimha.

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