Business Day (Nigeria)

Small businesses await FG’S N50bn grant

- By Bunmi Bailey & Favour Okpale

SEVERAL nano businesses are yet to receive cash from a N50 billion grant set aside for them by the Federal government, with three associatio­ns saying their members have not benefited from the palliative.

Nano businesses are enterprise­s that have one or two workers and an annual turnover of less than N3 million, according to the Small and Medium Enterprise­s Developmen­t Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN).

The fund, whose disburseme­nt started in March, is for one million nano businesses across the 774 local government areas in the country.

It is part of the Presidenti­al N200 billion Interventi­on Fund created to support businesses to navigate current tough economic conditions.

“Our 27,000 members have not received any payment yet,” Femi Egbesola, president of Associatio­n of Small Business Owners, said.

“We only heard the news that they have started disbursing the money. There is a website for registrati­on that our members have applied for and we have already submitted the details that contained their Bank Verificati­on Numbers,” Egbesola said.

He described the N50,000 to small businesses as child’s play that is not sustainabl­e.

“Rather than giving out the money, the government should begin to look at more sustainabl­e ways of supporting businesses,” Egbesola said.

Savior Iche, national president of Associatio­n of Micro Entreprene­urs (AMEN), said his members have not received a dime.

“All that money they claim to disburse to entreprene­urs is only on newspapers, radio and other electronic devices. It’s just audio money. In Lagos State alone, we have about 800 members, and we cover other states. Nobody has collected a dime from the N50,000,” he said.

He added that many entreprene­urs are folding up because they cannot continue in business.

“About 62 percent of entreprene­urs have closed down and the remaining 38 percent are in a coma.”

Gertrude Aikhimien, chairperso­n, Lagos State Chapter of National Associatio­n of Smallscale Industrial­ists (NASSI), said they have already submitted the names of their members who own nano businesses.

“They gave us a yardstick, and we filled out the forms. We gave them a list of over a thousand members from the associatio­n who fall into the list of nano businesses, but nobody has received it,” she said.

She added that NASSI is in every state of the federation with over 25,000 members across the country and that there are more than 5,000 in Lagos.

“Our president is pushing to receive the money state by state. We have a platform where we talk to every director from different states, and they claim to not have received it.”

Seun Olagunju, spokespers­on of Bank of Industry (BOI), told Businessda­y that the details of members of the various business associatio­ns were being collated through the Nigerian Associatio­n of Small and Medium Enterprise­s (NASME) through the Federal Ministry of Industry Trade and Investment.

“The disburseme­nt of the grant is ongoing and will be concluded by the end of May 2024. Disburseme­nt to the members of the various associatio­ns will be made available once the collation and verificati­on of their members’ details is concluded.”

Terfa Tilley-gyado, special adviser to the minister of industry, trade, and investment, said they had not done up to 20 percent of the disburseme­nts yet, adding that the process is still ongoing in phases.

He added that recipients’ names will be posted on the website post-completion and the ongoing disburseme­nt process is expected to reach around one million individual­s once concluded.

“Despite being in progress, the grant distributi­on has not finished. Interested parties must monitor the website for updates on successful applicants.”

The Presidenti­al Conditiona­l Grant Scheme, also known as the Trade Grants Scheme, offers financial grants, without repaymento­bligations,toeligible­small business owners operating in various sectors such as trading, food services, ICT, transporta­tion, creatives, and artisans.

Doris Uzoka-anite, minister of industry, trade and investment, said in a statement last Monday that applicatio­ns for the scheme have closed and that the government has commenced the loan disburseme­nt process for the micro, small, and medium enterprise­s (MSMES) and manufactur­ing sectors.

“We are pleased to report that the initial disburseme­nt to nano businesses has been met with success, and we are well on our way to supporting one million nano businesses throughout the country. Thou

sands of beneficiar­ies have already confirmed receipt with many more to come,” she said.

Abdulrasid Yarima, president/chairman of the governing council of NASME, said his members have already started receiving the money.

“Our members have started getting it, but it doesn’t mean others won’t get it as long as they fill out the online form. I am a member of the palliative committee. The process isn’t stressful,” he said.

“When you go online, there is a form to fill where you provide your name, National Identifica­tion Number, Bank Verificati­on Number, date of birth, business line, and skill. But unfortunat­ely, some people are not too comfortabl­e releasing their BVNS and NINS for security reasons,” he added.

According to Yarima, most of the associatio­ns have nano businesses as it comprises 60 percent out of 30 million MSMES in the country.

“The N50,000 is worth something to some people, but not to everyone. Besides, the money is not expected to be paid back because it’s a grant,” Yarima said.

The Tinubu administra­tion’s reforms including the removal of petrol subsidy and naira devaluatio­n, implemente­d in the second quarter of the year, have pushed up the cost of living in the country.

The removal of the fuel subsidy tripled the petrol price to more than N600 from N184, causing public transporta­tion providers such as buses, tricycles, and motorcycle­s to raise fares.

The floating of the naira increased the official exchange rate from N463.38/$ to N 1,309.9/$ on Thursday while the parallel market rate stood close to at N1,400/$.

The high cost of sourcing FX and petrol prices pushed Nigeria’s headline inflation rate to a record high of 33.20 percent in March, up from 31.70 percent in February, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

The latest labour force survey by the NBS shows that the percentage of self-employed people dropped for the first time since the statistica­l agency adopted a new methodolog­y for the country’s labour force.

It showed that the percentage of self-employed Nigerians which refers to own-account workers, contributi­ng family workers, and employers, declined to 87.3 percent in the third quarter of 2023 from 88.0 percent in the previous quarter.

Olamide Adeyeye, a Lagosbased human developmen­t researcher, said it is tough to keep a surviving enterprise at this time.

“The model of a surviving business is to engage in business transactio­ns that the profit is enough to keep the business owner’s sustenance for the day. But in an economy where inflation alone is almost 34 percent, profit margins will gradually become unsustaina­ble for-profit survival,” he said.

Many small businesses in Africa’s most populous nation have been struggling to survive in recent years owing to the fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-ukraine war.

They have been grappling with a combinatio­n of issues, including poor power supply, rising borrowing costs, soaring inflation, restrictiv­e economic policies, foreign exchange volatility, and tax multiplici­ty.

A recent report by SMEDAN, said 80 percent of SMES

fail before their fifth anniversar­y due to harsh economic environmen­ts, lack of access to capital, and poor business practices, which have stunted the growth and transition of micro-businesses.

Aikhimien, chairperso­n of NASSI, recommende­d that the best way to ensure the funds are disbursed is by using Business Membership Associatio­ns.

“The associatio­ns know every member registered in their books. So, if we have these groups that already know their members, the money should be given to such groups and the executives of the organisati­ons should now report back to the government, telling them of what they have done and giving the government the list where they can now verify,” she said.

Iche of AMEN added that the government should send the money to associatio­ns’ accounts where it would be managed properly.

“We will know how to manage it ourselves instead of telling someone to give us and it is not reaching us. They can also open an entreprene­urs’ desk in each commercial bank. The banks have our informatio­n and can know the performanc­e of the money.”

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