By Awal Mohammed |
Biashara Street in Nairobi in February. The
state credit will be availed to the SMEs next month, a time when most
business owners say they would have closed shop. [Edward
Kiplimo,Standard]
Financial Standard
Majority of these workers live from hand to mouth with little or no
financial savings and the
pandemic has not made things easy for them.
Kevin Amunga stares blankly at his half stocked shelves in his phone and
electronics shop in the busy streets of Moi Avenue in Nairobi’s Central
Business District (CBD)
His shop is sandwiched between six others that remain closed, having
been hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic that has ripped economies
globally.
During the pre-pandemic period, his shop would be a beehive of activity
with more shoppers entering and leaving the plaza, where he has rented.
But now, the traffic has been reduced to a trickle that gives him that
is inadequate to pay the monthly rent. “My neighbours have closed shops,
this has reduced traffic hence affecting my business. If the lockdown
and dusk to dawn curfew continues, I will have no option but to fold up,
because I won’t afford to pay rent or sustain my business,” said
Amunga.
His situation mirrors those of the many small and medium enterprises
(SME) across the country that are on the verge of folding, occasioned by
the pandemic. But the SMEs are not going down alone; thousands of
Kenyans that are employed in this sector continue to face uncertainty as
the lockdown is enforced.
A 2016 report by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) showed
that there were about 1.56 million licensed micro, small and medium
enterprises (MSMEs), and 5.85 million unlicensed ones, which employ
about 14.9 million people.
“On normal days, I used to employ at least four casuals who helped me in
serving my customers, but now I can’t afford to hire even one, as I
serve fewer customers,” said George Obiero, the proprietor of Delia
Dishes at Jamia Mall in the CBD.
To cushion the SMEs sector from possible collapse due to the effect of
the coronavirus, President Uhuru Kenyatta last week announced that the
Government will inject Sh3 billion as seed capital for the SME Credit
Guarantee Scheme, in a 53.7 billion economic stimulus programme.
Under the guarantee scheme, the Government will pay part of the loans
taken by SMEs, thus enabling banks to extend more credit to small
businesses at lower rates. But the scheme won’t start anytime soon, with
the earliest period when the cash will be availed to the SMEs being
next month, a time when most business owners say they would have closed
shop.
“I have exhausted all the possible ways to ensure my business remains
afloat, I honestly can’t go for another two more months if the
government doesn’t ease the restrictions,” a dejected Amunga said. His
sentiments have been echoed by the Central Bank of Kenya Governor Dr
Patrick Njoroge, who opined that if the credit guarantee scheme won’t
start immediately, the country’s SMEs sector would collapse.
“MSMEs don’t have a lot of buffers, they generally would die quickly,
they (MSMEs) are on the ropes,” said CBK Governor Patrick Njoroge in a
press conference last week.
But micro-businesses which form the bulk of the informal sector in the
country feel neglected by the government. They argue that the loans
availed to the businesses wouldn’t be accessible to them.
According to the Kenya National Federation of Juakali Association
Chairman Richard Muteti, majority of their members are semi-illiterate
and hence do not understand the bureaucracy involved accessing the
loans.
“This is a good approach by the Government to help small businesses, but
the informal sector the best way they can be approached for such an
initiative is through their associations because individual members
can’t access loans,” said Muteti.
The country has over 17.5 million people employed in MSMEs according to
the Kenya National Federation of Jua Kali Associations, which accounts
for 83 per cent of the country’s workforce in the private sector.
Majority of these workers live from hand to mouth with little or no
financial savings and the pandemic has not made things easy for them.
“Majority of our members have already closed shops, we have stopped
talking about business survival, we are now talking about people
survival, the pandemic has spelt death to us, and the president should
ease the restrictions, our sector cannot hold any more,” said Muteti.
Amunga serves one of his customers before rejoining us for the
interview; he hopes this will be the last weekend his business will have
to survive the lockdown.
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