Business
Expert Advocates Financial Support For SMEs
A financial consultant, Mr Christian Wessels, has advised the Federal Government to increase funding of Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs).
He told our correspondent in Lagos that this would act as a catalyst for the growth of the productive sector.
Wessels advised that government should aid entrepreneurs by giving them unhindered access to investable funds.
He said that government should focus more on promoting SMEs as a way of improving the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
“These entrepreneurs need government’s support by way of cheap credit facilities to grow their businesses,’’ Wessels, who is a Partner at Roland Berger Strategy Consultant, said.
He said that small -scale firms played important roles in fostering economic growth, which boost employment generation, facilitate scientific and technological innovation, as well as maintaining social stability.
“In the face of the uncertainty in the market and economic development, SMEs need more government support to survive.
“Many SMEs have been forced to turn to the high-interest money market.
“Often, getting loans from banks is always difficult with the effect of rising inflationary trend and government policy of tightening measures on lending which put pressure on investment in the real productive sector,’’ he said.
Wessels, however, predicted that Nigeria’s energy sector would improve in the next five years through the combined efforts of the government and private institutions.
“2012 is a year of dramatic economic and social challenges,’’ he said.
He said that his company focused on ways debts, welfare issues, energy supply and changes in the demography would affect the global economy.
Wessels said that the company was also exploring ways of how Africa, as a continent, was turning the challenges facing it into opportunities.
The Tide gathered that Roland Berger Strategy Consultants, founded in 1967, is one of the world’s leading strategy consultancy firms with 2,500 employees working in 47 offices in 35 countries worldwide, including Nigeria.