About 75 percent of Kenya’s small and medium-sized businesses
face collapse if they fail to get fresh funds from banks or equity
partners by end of next month, a Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) survey
reveals.
Citing a study conducted in April, CBK
Governor Patrick Njoroge on Thursday said the small businesses surveyed
had said that without help they would close by the end of June because
they lacked credit buffers and other resources to survive the slowdown
caused by the Coronavirus.
The impact of social
distancing, dusk-to-dawn curfew and closure of businesses like bars and
restaurants has impacted on consumer spending, leading to job cuts and
unpaid leave for workers as firms race to cut costs.
Should
small firms be financially distressed, this will deepen job losses
given that they account for the bulk of jobs in the country and have in
recent years emerged as the biggest drivers of new hiring.
“There
was a survey that was done at end of April and that survey indicated
that three quarters do not have cash beyond two months. That means by
end of June three quarters of the SMEs are already on the ropes and will
be gone because they do not have any cash to keep the lights on,” Dr
Njoroge told a virtual news conference.
“I wanted to
underscore the urgency of... putting in place the credit guarantee
scheme. This is extremely urgent. We cannot do this as business as
usual.”
The government will provide guarantees for loans given to
Kenya-based small and medium-sized businesses, meaning the government
commits to repay banks a share of the loans should the small traders
default.
The Treasury has sought MPs’ approval for Ksh3
billion ($30 million) as seed capital to kick-start the scheme, which
has received a €100 million ($111 million) commitment from the European
Union.
Dr Njoroge on Thursday said details of the credit guarantee scheme were still being worked on.
Kenya has reported 1,618 confirmed coronavirus cases and 58 deaths.
To
limit its spread, Kenya has suspended commercial flights in and out of
the country, imposed a dusk-to-dawn curfew and banned public gatherings.
It
has also halted movement in and out of counties hit hard by Covid-19,
including Mombasa and Nairobi—regions that form key pillars of Kenya’s
economy.
Small traders like barbershops, hotels and
pubs, which have had to close under coronavirus lockdown measures, have
been hit hard by effects of the virus.
“Most businesses
would like financial support from the government in form of grants or
cheap accessible loans to help them pay salaries,” said Karole Karuga,
chief executive of Kenya Private Sector Alliance (Kepsa)—private sector
lobby.
More Kenyans are starting to operate small
businesses out of the boots of their cars to make ends meet as the
coronavirus crisis has hit jobs and the economy.
Boniface Mbugua, who lost his catering job, drives his car to markets to sell food to traders.
John Njenga’s taxi business struggled to get passengers, forcing him to start hawking avocados and bananas from his car.
Despite
such entrepreneurship, lending to small businesses has traditionally
been seen as presenting more risk of default compared to lending to
large, established private firms and government-owned institutions. This
has seen some banks opt to insure some or all of their loan portfolios
to such small businesses.
The economic fallout brought by the coronavirus has made SMEs’ financial position even more precarious.
Without
the government stepping in to shoulder some of the credit risk, banks
are unlikely to expand their lending to the small businesses that face
the biggest challenge in funding their working capital and expansion
projects.
Before the emergence of Covid-19, the number
of formal jobs generated by the economy had fallen to a seven-year low
in 2019, dimming the hopes of school and college leavers in a year when
only 78,400 new formal jobs were reported.
However, the
decline was counterbalanced by the growth in informal jobs, which rose
from 744,000 in 2018 to 767,900 last year, according to the Kenya
National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS).
The rise in informal jobs highlights the growing importance of the Jua Kali sector as an employment creation machine in Kenya.
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