THE National Association of Microfinance Banks (NAMB) has advocated the need for the monetary authorities to broaden the scope of its policy steps towards improved funding of the nation’s Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs).
President of the association, Mallam Yusuf Ahmed Gyallesu, who commended the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for its sundry intervention initiatives to support the MSMEs over the years, said that new funds for the subsector could come in the form of interventions specifically designed and targeted at the MSMEs to be routed through MFBs.
Gyallesu, while speaking with journalists on how best the MFBs could be better funded to improve their contributions to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) after close to two years of COVID-19 pandemic-triggered slowdown at the end of the NAMB’s 11th Annual General Meeting (AGM) in Abuja, said the apex bank could also foster linkages between the Deposit Money Banks, Development Banks and other Specialized Financial Institutions such that MFBs to boost MSMEs’ productivity.
He said: “What the microfinance subsector needs now is funding to be able to support MSMEs. This funding can come in the form of interventions specifically designed and targeted at the MSMEs to be routed through MFBs.
“Another avenue is for CBN to foster linkages between the Deposit Money Banks, Development Banks and other Specialized Financial Institutions such that MFBs can source wholesale funds and refinancing facilities from them in order to widen their outreach and for on-lending to the MSMEs at relatively cheaper costs.
“In addition, the CBN could establish a Microfinance Sector Development Fund to provide the necessary support for the development of the sub-sector in terms of refinancing facility, capacity building, and other promotional activities”, the NAMB President added.
Commenting on the recent intervention by the National Assembly which resulted in the shifting of the recapitalization deadline for the MFBs, the seasoned banker noted that “the intervention of National Assembly was timely and a welcomed move. Even though it was persuasive to CBN, it came as a reprieve to our members who are now doubling their efforts to mobilize for additional capital.”
Gyallesu also described the increasing penetration of the rural areas by mobile banking operators and agents as a welcomed development, adding that the NAMB leadership and members see the development as creating opportunities for collaborations and partnerships with the mobile money companies.
According to him, these companies have their infrastructure and need platforms with an existing customer base to deploy their services, and this is where the MFBs come in.
Speaking on the NAMB’s membership verification exercise of licensed MFBs, Gyallesu, a former Managing Director of Ecobank Nigeria, disclosed that the exercise had been conducted and that the findings partly informed the NAMB decision to appeal to CBN to review the minimum recapitalization amounts downward and extend the dateline to 2025 to enable most of the weak MFBs to comply accordingly.
YOU SHOULD NOT MISS THESE HEADLINES FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE
We Have Not Had Water Supply In Months ― Abeokuta Residents
In spite of the huge investment in the water sector by the government and international organisations, water scarcity has grown to become a perennial nightmare for residents of Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital. This report x-rays the lives and experiences of residents in getting clean, potable and affordable water amidst the surge of COVID-19 cases in the state…
Selfies, video calls and Chinese documentaries: The things you’ll meet onboard Lagos-Ibadan train
The Lagos-Ibadan railway was inaugurated recently for a full paid operation by the Nigerian Railway Corporation after about a year of free test-run. Our reporter joined the train to and fro Lagos from Ibadan and tells his experience in this report…
[ICYMI] Lekki Shootings: Why We Lied About Our Presence — General Taiwo
The Lagos State Judicial Panel of Inquiry probing the killings at Lekki Toll Gate, on Saturday resumed viewing of the 24hrs footage of the October 20, 2020 shooting of #EndSARS protesters by personnel of the Nigerian Army…
ICYMI: How We Carried Out The 1993 Nigerian Airways Hijack —Ogunderu
On Monday, October 25, 1993, in the heat of June 12 annulment agitations, four Nigerian youngsters, Richard Ajibola Ogunderu, Kabir Adenuga, Benneth Oluwadaisi and Kenny Razak-Lawal, did the unthinkable! They hijacked an Abuja-bound aircraft, the Nigerian Airways airbus A310, and diverted it to Niger Republic. How did they so it? Excerpts…
Sahabi Danladi Mahuta, a community mobiliser and APC chieftain. Mahuta spoke to select journalists at the sidelines of an Islamic conference in Abuja recently. Excerpts…