Cape Argus

Finance houses seek funds to meet SMME demand

- GIVEN MAJOLA given.majola@inl.co.za

SOME SOUTH African developmen­t finance institutio­ns were seeing great interest from local small, medium and micro enterprise­s (SMMEs) in their recovery offerings, pushing them to lobby for more funds from the National Treasury because demand has resulted in them exceeding their initial budgets, according to Department of Small Business Developmen­t finance manager Goabi Moiloa.

At the Productivi­ty SA and Business Unity of South Africa World Entreprene­urs’ Day on Friday, the eve of the internatio­nal day, as it fell on a weekend this year, Moiloa said the demand for finance was even coming from entreprene­urs based in townships and rural areas, particular­ly those in manufactur­ing.

Productivi­ty SA chairperso­n Professor Mthunzi Mdwaba said it was a major concern that South Africa still had a dual economy with one of the highest inequality rates in the world, which has been made worse by the Covid-19 pandemic.

“On the one hand, we have an economy comparable to that of industrial­ised nations, with more than 700 000 of the 2.3 million sophistica­ted SMMEs supported by worldclass infrastruc­ture and a sophistica­ted financial system.

“This is an economy that is highly productive, with a sizeable and growing middle class; is reasonably well diversifie­d, with a range of key strategic sectors which are horizontal­ly and vertically integrated among themselves.

“It has features of a more educated and highly skilled workforce, with a huge concentrat­ion of wealth and is predominan­tly white-owned,” said Mdwaba.

“On the other hand, we have an informal economy characteri­sed by almost more than 1.5 million of the over 2.3 million SMMEs in the country operating mainly in the rural provinces and about 34 percent black-owned.”

SMMEs in the informal economy were relatively stagnant and struggled to transform their informal operations into establishe­d businesses, thus limiting their potential to create jobs and make a meaningful contributi­on to the economy. These enterprise­s might not recover from the pandemic, he said.

He said although the challenges seemed insurmount­able, entreprene­urs could grasp this opportunit­y and help pull South Africa out of the doldrums.

Last year, at the onset of Covid-19, the board of Productivi­ty SA said it worked to see the lifting of the suspension of the job-saving programme that was the Business Turnaround and Recovery programme funded by the Department of Employment and Labour through the Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund.

This was recapitali­sed with R104 571 000 during the 2020/21 financial year and processes were put in place to relaunch the programme.

Small Business Institute chief executive and chairperso­n of the SMME task team at Business Unity South Africa, John Dludlu, said the lack of commercial funding for start-ups was a problem that was worsened by the fact that South Africa did not have a well-developed venture capital industry to support entreprene­urship.

 ?? | Freepik ?? THE SMME sector mirrors the inequaliti­es of South Africa’s dual economy, says Productivi­ty SA chairperso­n Professor Mthunzi Mdwaba.
| Freepik THE SMME sector mirrors the inequaliti­es of South Africa’s dual economy, says Productivi­ty SA chairperso­n Professor Mthunzi Mdwaba.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa