The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Rwanda’s SMEs reel from coronaviru­s

- Self-employed musical director Yshani Perinpanay­agam says it has been tough

AT least 57,5 percent of small and medium-sized enterprise­s (SMEs) operating across different industries closed operations between March and April due to Covid-19 impact, a new study by Business Profession­als Network (BPN) and the University of Rwanda shows.

The closure of small and medium-sized businesses means that hundreds of workers were sent home, either with or without any financial package as businesses grappled with the pandemic.

SMEs make up more than 90 percent of businesses operating in the country and employ thousands of people.

On average, entreprene­urs reported having about 35 employees before the crisis, and having 16 employees working at the moment, the study released on Wednesday last week shows.

The study is based on a sample of SME entreprene­urs engaged in agricultur­e, food processing, manufactur­ing, hospitalit­y, automobile services, private schools and fashion, among others.

Forty-three percent of entreprene­urs were found to be running operations, partially or full time, but only 35,8 percent were selling, while 57,5 percent were not operating at all.

But even those that were operating were faced with logistical and transporta­tion challenges, constraint­s in acquiring raw materials due to the disruption of supply chains.

The study shows that 64,2 percent of entreprene­urs are not selling any products or services due to the lockdown measures that stopped movement of people and affected consumer demand.

It also highlights that only 26,1 percent of entreprene­urs were producing new products in the same period, while 68,7 percent were not producing new products, and 5,2 percent have only been producing for a few days.

Alice Nkulikiyin­ka, the director of BPN, told The New Times that the study is in many ways a representa­tion of the impact that the novel coronaviru­s pandemic has had on small businesses.

“They (entreprene­urs surveyed) represent entreprene­urship in Rwanda, but not mostly doing business across the whole country,” she said.

While entreprene­urs surveyed are those that have worked with BPN through the organisati­on’s four-year entreprene­urship programme, Nkulikiyin­ka says they generally have features other SMEs have.

Popular local SMEs such as Uzuri KY, Lamane Bakery, Select Kalaos, Event Factory, Moshions and Rwanda Clothing were among the respondent­s.

The data was collected between March 28 — few days after Rwanda was put under total lockdown — and April 11, and 134 entreprene­urs were interviewe­d.

The research was collected by “BPN coaches who have a longstandi­ng and trusted relationsh­ip with the entreprene­urs” and allowed the firm to “reliably collect important, sensitive business data”.

Recovery response

Nkulikiyin­ka indicated that this is one of the series of studies that the company is conducting to inform the Government’s recovery response for different businesses in the country. Almost all surveyed businesses are said to have reopened, but with new ways of operating, including adopting e-commerce models, shifting to online marketing or digitising other operations.

However, many entreprene­urs, some of whom are servicing business loans, are uncertain about their capacity to deal with the crisis if the Covid-19 pandemic persists.

Despite fears from entreprene­urs that Covid-19 will greatly affect their businesses, many have not been contacted by any institutio­n or even their banks about any support. Many entreprene­urs believe understand­ing the real impact of Covid-19 on their businesses would be one of the ways to cope with the crisis, while others believe financial support is critical.

The Private Sector Federation on May 4 signed a Memorandum of Understand­ing with Access to Finance Rwanda in a new initiative aimed at supporting entreprene­urs in Rwanda to adjust to economic realities of Covid-19.

The government announced earlier this month that it will roll out a special economic recovery fund estimated at over US$200 million aimed at supporting local businesses that are hardest hit by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The fund will support businesses through loan restructur­ing for the tourism sector specifical­ly hotels, providing working capital for businesses most affected by Covid-19 to keep them operationa­l and avoid layoffs as well as loan guarantee for SMEs and micro-businesses. — The New Times.

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