By NATION CORRESPONDENT
In Summary
- The Micro Small and Medium Enterprises Act that was signed into law in December 2012 categorises micro enterprises as those businesses with an annual turnover of not more than Sh500,000 and that employ less than 10 people.
Mid-tier lender, Diamond Trust Bank, has established a unit targeting microfinance and individual borrowers.
The bank’s managing director Nasim Devji said many
lenders have for long shied away from extending credit to very small
enterprises (VSE) slowing growth in this sector that employs over 8.5
million Kenyans.
“This is one of the segments that has not received
a lot of attention since a lot of banks tend to focus on the small and
medium enterprises. Then there are the very small enterprises which are
currently not well looked after,” Ms Devji said yesterday during the
bank’s Annual General Meeting.
She said the microfinance unit has been set up
within the bank to specifically begin courting the micro-businesses,
with the long term target of supporting them to become small and medium
enterprises that many commercial banks have zeroed in on.
The Micro Small and Medium Enterprises Act that
was signed into law in December 2012 categorises micro enterprises as
those businesses with an annual turnover of not more than Sh500,000 and
that employ less than 10 people.
The law is now seen as a weapon to streamline this
sector by requiring entrepreneurs to cultivate the culture of
record-keeping and formalisation of their operations. It is expected
this will open the way for a scramble of the sector by commercial banks
that have for long considered them a high risk group.
“We believe this is a group that is often unable
to access financial services. We want to be in a position to help them
access financial services,” Ms Devji further said adding that the World
Bank’s investment arm, the International Finance Corporation (IFC) will
provide 50 per cent guarantee to credit extended to these businesses.
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