The African Guarantee Fund for small and medium-sized
enterprises (AGF), has received a capital injection of EUR 25 million
(about Sh2.9 billion) from the German government-owned KfW
Entwicklungsbank (KfW Development Bank).
The
Nairobi-headquartered pan-African fund said it will ramp up its
financing activities among local lenders with a focus on SMEs following
the fresh capital boost.
“Through the increased
capital, AGF has acquired more capacity to address the financing barrier
which remains a key challenge for African SMEs,” AGF chief executive
officer Felix Bikpo said in a statement.
“AGF will now
be able to channel more guarantees and technical assistance to financial
institutions thereby generating enhanced growth in the African SME
sector.” SMEs in the country have been hard hit following the September
2016 ceilings on loan charges at four percentage points above the
Central Bank Rate, now at nine per cent.
Private sector credit grew by 4.4 percent growth in the 12 months to October compared to September 3.9 percent.
The
credit growth remained well below the central bank’s target rate of
12-15 percent, a growth adequate to support economic development.
“Our
investment into AGF forms part of KfW’s strategy to promote private
investment and financial markets in Africa,” said KfW director for
regional funds Thomas Duve.
African Guarantee Fund
launched six years ago says it has led the guarantee market in Africa by
issuing guarantee products to more than 100 financial institutions that
have in turn made available $1.6 billion of financing for SMEs across
39 countries in Africa.
Kenya introduced interest rate
controls in September 2016 with the enactment of a law that limits
lending rates to not more than four percentage points above the Central
Bank Rate in response to the high cost of credit that saw banks lend to
private businesses and individuals at more than 20 percent.
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