Business
SMEs’ Poor Access To Capital Worries Experts
The Federal Government has been urged to address the constraint of poor access to capital by Small and Medium -scale Enterprises (SMEs).
Experts said that successful resolution of this problem was capable of reducing the high level of unemployment in the country.
The Director General of LCCI, Mr Muda Yusuf, told journalists that the growth of SMEs was being hampered by poor access to loans.
He urged the Federal Government to improve access to loans by SMEs and also improve on the development of the infrastructure.
Lecturer, Department of Economics, University of Lagos, Dr Ernest Odior, said that vibrant SMEs would bring about 40 per cent increase in job creation.
Odior said that many businesses went into extinction due to the poor access to loans and high bank lending rates.
The Chairman, Lagos Chapter of Nigerian Association of Small Scale Industrialists (NASSI), Mr Segun Kuti-George, decried the unwillingness of banks to grant loans to small businesses.
He said that many members of his association now relied on loans from the cooperative societies which were not enough.
The Public Diplomacy Officer, United States Consulate, Mrs Rhonda Watson, said that the Federal Government should increase channels of providing loans to women entrepreneurs.
According to Watson, when women succeed in business, it also spells success for families and the nation.
The Head, Department of Economics, University of Abuja, Prof. Sarah Anyanwu, urged the Federal Government to encourage SMEs and discourage importation of competitive goods.
The Vice President, National Association of Cane Weavers in Lagos, Mr Osoko Ohowetiyi, said that microfinance banks were not willing to give loans to small businesses any longer.
Ohowetiyi said that some business operators could have expanded businesses if they had access to loans.
“We have realised that commercial banks don’t want to give loans to small businesses, but to multinational companies alone.
“The interest rates are too high and when they reduce it for small businesses, the banks give as little as N30,000, which is too small,” he said.
Ohowetiyi appealed to the government to focus more on the activities of the microfinance banks since they were established solely to assist the active poor.