The Guardian (Nigeria)

Beyond COVID- 19 Palliative­s For Small Businesses

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THE Federal Government’s move to roll out new set of palliative­s for Micro Small and Medium Enterprise­s ( MSMES) is commendabl­e, as millions of such businesses have no support in any form despite being the bedrock of the economy, the execution plan is the challenge at the moment. The palliative­s appear to be piecemeal, which should not be so. Besides, a robust economic recovery plan to deal with post COVID- 19 economic downturn should be the starting point. The stimulus should target the entire economy and not just one sector.

For instance, the new palliative­s seem to focus only on what the National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion Control ( NAFDAC) could do, which is not enough. Under the scheme, the government will give 80 per cent discount to all MSMES that registered their product on the electronic platform of NAFDAC. Additional­ly, the Federal Government has also granted zero tariffs for the first 200 MSMES to register on the agency’s platform.

The NAFDAC Automated Product Administra­tion and Monitoring System ( NAPAMS), is a software solution for the regulation and control of the importatio­n, exportatio­n, manufactur­e, distributi­on, advertisem­ent, sale and use of foods, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, chemicals, detergents and bottled water in Nigeria. The incentive on products and services registrati­on with NAFDAC is just one aspect. What happens after the registrati­on is the issue. Lack of necessary finance to do the business has always been the main challenge. The Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo reeled out the incentives the other day at the virtual unveiling of palliative­s for MSMES by NAFDAC, while tasking other agencies of the Federal Government to come up with palliative­s for the MSMES. He unveiled the electronic registrati­on platform alongside the Director General of NAFDAC, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye and representa­tives of other federal agencies regulating micro, small and medium enterprise­s in the country.

After unveiling the electronic registrati­on platform, Osinbajo said: “These palliative­s reflect the President Muhammadu Buhari administra­tion’s determinat­ion to support MSMES and the priority the Federal Government places on small businesses.”

He listed NAFDAC’S palliative­s to include e- registrati­on of MSMES/ products at 80 per cent discounted rate over a period of six months; zero tariffs for the first 200 micro and small businesses to register on the e- platform and waiver on administra­tive charges for overdue late renewal of expired licenses of micro/ small businesses products for a period of 90 days.

While these incentives are commendabl­e as noted earlier, the critical support the MSMES need is finance. Not long ago, the Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment, Aisha Abubakar, announced that the Federal Government would assist the Small and Medium Enterprise­s ( SMES) to have better access to finance, a promise that requires dramatic policy thrust to change the extant situation and give blood to the businesses. Nigeria’s wobbly economy has been sustained by the small business, even at the most trying times.

Consider the contributi­ons of market women, hairdresse­rs, barbers, vulcanizer­s, mechanics, tailors and a host of other similar businesses at the grassroots level of the economy. These people are at their corners doing their own things. They constitute the invisible hands holding the economy at all times. And their contributi­ons should not be discounted.

Unfortunat­ely, the formal financial sector comprising commercial banks and other non- banking institutio­ns like insurance companies, deposit takers and building societies have no place for SMES in their credit lending scheme. The SMES can’t meet the credit conditions set by these institutio­ns.

The proliferat­ion of micro- finance banks ( MFB) has not solved this problem. There are about 920 micro- finance banks on record in Nigeria, establishe­d, principall­y, to make credit easily accessible to the informal sector, usually dominated by women.

Whereas the MFBS are supposed to advance credit to the poor on easily affordable terms, experience has shown that the banks seem to have even more stringent conditions than the commercial banks. Some businesswo­men who have attempted to access credit from the MFBS have been disappoint­ed.

There isn’t much difference between the micro- credit institutio­ns and the convention­al banks as both demand collateral security to qualify for credit. The repayment terms are even more flexible in the convention­al banks than with the micro- credit banks.

For instance, while the convention­al banks could advance credit for one year tenor, the micro- credit banks require just six months to repay any loan, a condition that could hardly be met by most small business owners.

Based on the foregoing, it is doubtful how the federal government intends to break the stronghold­s in the financial system to make funds easily accessible to small business enterprise­s. This is where stimulus is mostly needed.

What does the government intend to do and how does it plan to achieve it? The inability of the SMES to access credit facility is systemic. Government requires strong policy paradigm shift to be able to put a new order in place. In the main, government should do more by making the operation of SMES easier and accessible. The various agencies that are involved should be made to function in a more coordinate­d and robust manner. This is a customer- centred business. It is about the real sector that hardly receives serious action beyond rhetoric. In the meantime, having one- stop office complex where micro businesses could do all their registrati­ons without having to move from one part of the town to the other is a strategy that should be considered beyond COVID- 19 exigency.

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