Business Day (Ghana)

Only 5% Of Local MSMEs Export – Study

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Ghana’s ability to take advantage of the Africa Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) has been dealt a major blow after a baseline study found that only 5 percent of the country’s Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise­s (MSMEs) export their products.

This was after surveying 84,592 MSMEs in 245 out 261 districts in Ghana’s 16 administra­tive regions with most of the surveyed firms from the Ashanti (23,123, equivalent to 27.3 percent and Greater Accra (18,856, representi­ng 22.3 percent) respective­ly.

The survey found that only 4,177 MSMEs from the 84,592 – representi­ng a paltry 5 percent of the enterprise­s – export their products and/or services.

According to the surveywhic­h was sanctioned by the Ghana Enterprise­s Agency (GEA) under the GEA-Mastercard Foundation’s Young Africa Works Project and conducted by Palladium Group Ghana Limited – of the significan­t proportion of the MSMEs in all the 16 regions, 86 percent are operating in the informal sector; with the Western North Region recording the least.

The study further found that a significan­t majority (87 percent) of the enterprise­s are micro-sized. Again, the majority of micro- (33 percent), small (35 percent) and medium-sized (24 percent) enterprise­s operate within the handicraft sector; while majority of large firms are in the agro-processing, textiles and garments sectors.

The baseline study of the Ghanaian MSME landscape indicates that Ghana’s MSME sector shows very minimal growth spurts – as firms start at a particular size and remain so throughout their lifetime, indicating that not much changes over time, Professor Ebo Turkson, an economist at the University of Ghana, explained this when he presented the findings.

“These findings generally suggest that although Ghana has a very vibrant MSME sector, a large majority are microsized – not innovative, highly informal, constraine­d by access to credit and do not grow in higher size thresholds. If policy can enhance the productivi­ty of MSMEs through innovative activities, it will encourage their participat­ion in the export markets and partly address the issue of access to credit,” he stated.

Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the GEA, Kosi Yankey-Ayeh, welcomed the survey’s findings, saying in an interview with the Business and Financial Times (B&FT) that the baseline study has given the agency a better picture of the country’s MSME sector; and that will lead to the creation of bespoke interventi­ons which ensure rapid scaleup with a focus on heightenin­g exportatio­n into other markets.

“It shows potential, it shows opportunit­y; and this is a great time for us to enhance more people to export…build their capacity to export and take advantage of the continenta­l free trade area,” she stated.

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