Raheem Akingbolu
Barely three years after the federal government introduced the Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme (GEEP), a microcredit scheme, the initiative has earned recognition for driving financial inclusion in the country.
Barely three years after the federal government introduced the Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme (GEEP), a microcredit scheme, the initiative has earned recognition for driving financial inclusion in the country.
GEEP, a microcredit initiative of the
federal government which commenced in 2016, includes
MarketMoni,
FarmerMoni, and the TraderMoni. It has impacted over two million
Nigerians at the bottom of the pyramid accessing credit in three years
and being brought into financial services of bank account and mobile
wallets, there is consensus on the scale of impact the initiative
wields. GEEP has been described as the largest public microcredit scheme
in the world and 54.2 per cent of its beneficiaries are women.
At the last session of 62nd United
Nations Commission in New York, a statement revealed that GEEP was
commended for pushing the envelope in technological innovations for
successful last-mile delivery of credit at massive scale.
This was in recognition of the
programme’s roles in building a completely digitised loan operation,
positioning of Bank Verification (BVN) as digital collateral to aid
financial inclusion, use of facial recognition for de-deduplication,
GPS-based mapping and profile of candidates to markets, and exhaustive
data capture to truly formalise the informal sector.
In a related development, the
programme’s Chief Operating Officer, Uzoma Nwagba, was said to have
emerged among 22 other emerging African leaders picked across the
continent, as a recipient of 2019 Archbishop Desmond Tutu Leadership
Fellowship.
The Desmond Tutu Fellowship is set up by
AFLI and Oxford to identify and cultivate young African leaders whose
work has achieved “far reaching impact on the continent.”
“Selection into the lifelong Fellowship is an attestation of Uzoma’s role in delivering one of the world’s most impactful tech-based SME intervention programs, and the world’s largest public microcredit scheme,” it added.
According to the statement, Nwagba, prior to GEEP, worked as an
Analyst at Goldman Sachs, Product Manager at Microsoft, and Senior
Associate at African Capital Alliance. The statement described him as an
individual who is passionate about running public institutions like
ethical businesses.“Selection into the lifelong Fellowship is an attestation of Uzoma’s role in delivering one of the world’s most impactful tech-based SME intervention programs, and the world’s largest public microcredit scheme,” it added.
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