Tag: BoI

  • BoI disburses N123m loan for aquaculture development in Ogun

    BoI disburses N123m loan for aquaculture development in Ogun

    The Bank of Industry has disclosed that its loan portfolio to aquaculture cooperative societies and enterprises in Ogun State has hit N123 million.

    According to the bank, the facility was accessed at a single digit interest rate of seven per cent per annum under the matching fund arrangement that saw the Ogun State Government and the bank creating a pool of N1.0 billion for on-lending to MSMEs in the state.

    In a statement made available by the bank, the bank explained that in pursuance of its mandate of transforming the Industrial sector of Nigeria, evolved the Matching Fund concept in partnership with various State Governments, in order to provide access to finance for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) in the states.

    “The Matching Fund Scheme entails the State Governments providing funds that are matched equally by BOI, in order to increase the quantum of funds available to MSMEs in the states in support of their economic activities geared towards job and wealth creation.

    “Ogun State is one of the 17 states currently collaborating with BOI in the Matching Fund arrangement. The Ogun State Government contributed the sum of N500million which was matched by BOI to create a pool of N1.0 billion for on-lending to MSMEs in Ogun State at a single digit interest rate of 7 per cent per annum.

    “The Matching Fund has been deployed towards funding entrepreneurs engaged in aquaculture, livestock and fish feed milling, cassava flour, garri, bakery, water bottling, textiles (batik/tie and dye), polyethylene products, block making among others,” it added.

    Under the arrangement, the bank stated that a total of N123 million has so far been disbursed to 21 aquaculture cooperative societies and enterprises engaged in the production of cat fish in eight Local Government Areas of Ogun State namely: Abeokuta South, Yewa North, Ijebu North, Ijebu South, Sagamu, Odogbolu, Abigi and Ijebu-Ode.

    It explained that the 21 cooperative societies and enterprises however currently produce 1,890 tonnes of fish, which only meets 2.4 per cent of the estimated demand of 79,000 tonnes of fish per annum in Ogun State, reflecting an indication of the great opportunity that exists for investment in aquaculture in the State, as well as for value addition activities in fish processing for production of smoked fish, fillets, among others.

    The Managing Director/Chief Executive of the Bank of Industry, Rasheed Olaoluwa, in assessing the aquaculture development programme, declared that “I am indeed very happy that BoI is creating such a remarkable economic impact in Ogun State, which is evident in the almost 2,000 jobs (500 direct and 1,500 indirect) created under the programme, coupled with the linkages established between the fish farms and off-takers such as restaurants, hotels, food processing companies, as well as with suppliers of fish feeds and other inputs.”

    On his part, the Ogun State Commissioner for Commerce and Industry, Bimbola Ashiru said: “it was the widely acknowledged importance of fish as a rich source of dietary protein that prompted the Ogun State Government to collaborate with the Bank of Industry in promoting aquaculture in the State under the Matching Fund Scheme.”

  • BoI disburses N780 billion as loans, intervention funds

    BoI disburses N780 billion as loans, intervention funds

    The Bank of Industry (BoI) yesterday said it disbursed a total of N780 billion last year as loans and intervention funds to the nation’s real sector and other key sectors of the economy.

    Its Managing Director, Rashid Olaoluwa, who spoke at the yearly conference of the Nigerian Institution of Estate Surveyors and Valuers in Osogbo, Osun State, said the bank has also increased its intervention to critical sectors of the economy within the last five years, specifically between 2010 to 2014.

    He said: “BoI has become impactful within the last five years and at least 1.8million jobs have been created through such efforts.  Before 2009, the level of intervention was below N30 billion but we have been able to improve access of customers to the funds as well as increase their capacity in the utilisation of such facilities.

    “We are doing a lot of things to ensure that we can provide that comprehensive support to our small and medium enterprises. We are reviewing our regional status to state offices in order to be able to serve our customers better.”

    He also tasked members of the institution on the need to adhere to strict professional ethics adding that valuation of assets remained a critical aspect of financial intermediation that is often fraught with malpractices.

    According to him, it is often discovered that false values are placed on assets, adding that this practice is prevalent in an industry where professionals have decided not to adhere to ethical guidelines.

    He said:  “Development and financial institutions most times discover that the value placed on some assets does not represent the reality and this is affecting financial intermediation by development finance institutions. Estate valuers play a critical role in the society as they are at the centre in placing value on assets. As a bank, we depend on their judgment.  The institute needs to task its members on the need to embrace fair and ethical practice while performing their duties.

    “Similarly, professionals in the estate valuation industry cannot afford to ignore the place of technology in the discharge of their duties in other to be globally recognised and competitive.”

  • BOA grants collateral-free loans to youths

    BOA grants collateral-free loans to youths

    Mrs. Tokunbo Afolabi, the Manager, Bank of Agriculture (BOA), Lagos Branch, on Thursday urged the youths to take advantage of the collateral-free funding opportunities provided by the bank, to empower themselves.

    NAN reports that the call was made while speaking at the Nigerian Association of Small and Medium Enterprises (NASME) 2015 General Meeting in Lagos.

    According to her, youths between the ages of 18 and 35 years, who engaged in agribusiness, can access up to N1 million loans, without collateral.

    “The loan is dedicated solely to the youths, in partnership with the Federal Government’s ‘You Win’ programme.

    “The loan is granted to youths for start-ups or expansion of agribusiness,’’ Afolabi said.

    She, however, added that youths applying for the loan must provide two acceptable guarantors, one of which must be a civil servant.

    Afolabi also said that micro, small and medium enterprises (SMEs) could access up to N250,000 by opening and running a Micro Enterprises Savings Account with the BOA.

    She said that the account would also encourage micro enterprises and cooperative groups to develop a savings culture and assist them in achieving a steady and regular income.

    “Account holders will enjoy attractive interest rates, monthly interest payments, a flexible standing order, acceptability and free passbook,’’ she added

  • BoI to build synergy with local meter manufacturer

    BoI to build synergy with local meter manufacturer

    A meter manufacturing company in Ogun State, MOMAS Electric Meters Manufacturing Company Ltd (MEMMCOL) has said it can manufacture all the metres needed by the electricity  distribution companies (DISCO’s) in the country.

    Its Chairman, Mr. Kola Balogun, spoke while conducting the Managing Director of Bank of Industry (BoI), Mr. Rasheed Olaoluwa and his team round his factory on the Lagos/Ibadan Expressway, Ogun State.

    Balogun, an engineer, also told The Nation that he set up the firm to manufacture digital prepaid electricity meters.

    He said the company has developed some world-class standard products to provide electricity metering solutions, using the latest technologies in design and production.

    Balogun, who noted that the company believes in the local content policy of the Federal Government, said Nigeria can no longer depend on other countries for its technological requirement, adding that it should develop and create value with appropriate policies to encourage indigenous firms.

    He said his firm has almost 100 per cent local content  in human  resources and materials, adding that he employs young Nigerians and equips them with requisite training locally and internationally. “We have invested a lot of resources in our people through training and retraining. Some of our engineers have been trained in India and in the United States (US) to ensure that they compete favourably with their counterparts anywhere in the world,” Balogun said.

    He said with tenacity of purpose and appropriate technology, including smart technology and ruggedness, the company has  produced integrated circuit and silicon conductors, noting that it was a bold step in the sector for an indigenous company because of its high technology value.

    Responding, BoI’s chief praised the company for its technology, noting that they are comparable to others around the globe. He urged that the nation’s industrial policy be skewed towards  companies such as MEMMCOL to turn the economy around.

    He said the company can meet local demand in the metering system for the energy and the telecoms sector.

    According to him, for a country with over 130 million telephone subscribers, the company and the public will be best for it. He said: “The technology solves two particular problems such as cash flow for the subscriber and for the telecommunication companies to have proper billing for their customers.”

    Olaoluwa advised the firm to explore opportunities in the sector and exploit its core competence. On the cost advantage of the metering system, he implored telecommunication companies to stop importing metres as the locally produced ones are more efficient and cheaper. He said the bank is looking in the area of off-grid solar energy solutions for the sector hence, a Nigerian entity at the forefront of technology transfer should be supported.

    The MEMMCOL chief executive said: “Other countries support their experts. Having a stable naira will give us advantage because we also source some of our materials abroad. Within the pricing index of the regulator we can compete with imported products. We have interactive meter that works with a phone such that with your phone you can calculate your load profile from your office or home. However, this, we acknowledge, requires a lot of campaign to educate the public because of the knowledge gap. The  phone interactive metre technology is smart and indigenous to us. Our client profile is growing by the day”

    He called on the government to  build a national payment gateway to encourage the DISCO’s key into the new technology  to discourage people  from  queuing to pay for electricity bills  and buying recharge cards from hawkers. The technology, he said, affords people the opportunity to do their businesses from the comfort of their homes.

    On support from the government, he said the company received five-year tax holiday from and financial support from BoI

    The BoI boss said as a development bank, the bank wants to key in into the government’s campaign of Light- up- Nigeria. This was the reason for supporting energy solutions in six locations of the country, he added.

    According to Olaoluwa, the support for MEMMCOL is to encourage it to grow to a level like its counterpart in the US, Solar  Energy,  which has grown into a multi-billion dollar company.

    He pledged that the bank would provide a portal to profile its quality customers with good output to interact with and patronise one another.

    He said if supported, the company could employ about 500 workers instead of the 100 has at the moment.

  • BoI boosts card manufacturing with N1.1b

    BoI boosts card manufacturing with N1.1b

    The Bank of Industry (BoI) has set aside  N1.1 billion  for the manufacturing industry.

    BoI’s Managing Director, Rasheed Olaoluwa, told The Nation after his facility tour of SecureID Limited in Lagos,  that the bank is supporing the sector because it remains a growth driver and has huge potential for job creation.

    “Manufacturing in Nigeria is taking a new edge. I am delighted at what I have seen today. We are witnessing a successful backward integration of activities in the card industry through local production of cards. The company has established capacity and smart manufacturing techniques. As a customer of our bank, we have supported the business and this shows that the facility has been effectively utilised,” he added.

    With a capacity utilisation level set at 70 per cent, Olaoluwa explained that BoI continues to raise its stake in industries that enhance job creation adding that the company, with improved capacity would employ at least 350 people from the teeming unemployed population in the country.

    The Managing Director of SecureID Limited, Mrs Kofo Akinkugbe, noted that the company has the capacity and the quality of operational and administrative personnel to produce chip and PIN-based smartcards that support payments and biometric identification, verification and authentication purposes. “We provide turn-key solutions for the smartcard identity industry from project start, through design, manufacture and personalisation to final card packaging/fulfillment. SecureID supports a wide range of card products, such as EMV SmartCards, GSM SIM cards, Magnetic-stripe debit cards, Loyalty cards, Contactless dual interface chip cards, Multipurpose secure identity cards and Mifare cards,” she said.

    She reiterated that her firm’s local production of smart cards for the financial sector, telecoms and public sector has reduced the level of imports and exposure to the foreign exchange market.

  • BoI, Ecobank sign pact on SMEs

    BoI, Ecobank sign pact on SMEs

    Bank of Industry (BoI) has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Ecobank Nigeria to provide loans at low interest rate to the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs)sub-sector.

    Managing Director/Chief Executive, BoI, Mr. Rasheed Olaoluwa, while speaking at the event in Lagos, said Ecobank and nine other banks in the country were selected based on their support to the SMEs, adding that the low interest rate will heighten activities in the sub-sector.

    According to the MoU, the 10 banks would provide working capital loans to SMEs qualified by the BoI at interest rate of Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) plus six per cent, with tenor ranging from six months to 12 months.  The BoI on the other hand would provide Term Loans to the qualified SMEs at between nine and ten per cent rate with tenor ranging from three to five years, and moratorium of six to 12 months.

    Deputy Managing Director, Ecobank Nigeria, Tony Okpanachi, explained that the selection of Ecobank by BoI was in recognition of the massive support the bank has offered the sub-sector over time.  He observed that the support has won the Ecobank several awards and recognitions in recent times.

  • BoI stakes N1.1b  on backward  integration for card manufacturing

    BoI stakes N1.1b on backward integration for card manufacturing

    The Bank of Industry (BoI) has committed  N1.1 billion to the backward integration in the smart cards manufacturing industry, thereby reducing importation of cards that could be manufactured locally.

    With a capacity to manufacture 100million cards yearly, BoI noted that card solutions for data security, physical plant security and integrity processing standards could now be accessed in the country.

    Speaking during a facility tour of SecureID Limited in Lagos, its Managing Director, Rasheed Olaoluwa, explained that the bank is committed to the manufacturing sector as the sector remains a growth driver and has huge potential for job creation.

    He said: “Manufacturing in Nigeria is taking a new edge. I am delighted at what I have seen today. SecureID Limited is the first integrated manufacturing company in Nigeria and Africa. What we witnessed today also happened in Nnewi recently at Innoson vehicle manufacturing plant where cars are manufactured in the country rather than just assembling the parts.

    “We are witnessing a successful backward integration of activities in the card industry through local production of cards. The company has established capacity and smart manufacturing techniques. As a customer of our bank, we have supported the business and this shows that the facility has been effectively utilised.”

    With a capacity utilisation level set at 70 per cent, Olaoluwa explained that BoI will continuesto raise its stake in industries that enhance job creation adding that the company, with improved capacity would employ at least 350 from the teeming unemployed population in the country.

    The Managing Director of SecureID Limited, Mrs Kofo Akinkugbe, said the company can produce chip and PIN-based smartcards that support payments and biometric identification, verification and authentication.

    According to her, the company’s local production of smart cards for the financial sector, telecoms and public sectors has reduced the level of imports and exposure to the foreign exchange market.

  • BoI, 10 banks to underwrite SMEs projects

    BoI, 10 banks to underwrite SMEs projects

    The Bank of Industry (BoI) has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with 10 SME-friendly banks.

    This is coming on the heels of the success of the accreditation of 122 Business Development Service Providers (BDSPs) to assist the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in the development of bankable business plans and proposals to facilitate their access to finance,

    Managing Director, BoI, Mr. Rasheed Olaoluwa, explained that 10 commercial banks that are renowned for their SME-centric activities were chosen to partner with them in the financing of their SME customers.

    He listed the banks as Access Bank, Diamond Bank, Ecobank, Fidelity Bank, First Bank, First City Monument Bank, Skye Bank, Stanbic IBTC Bank, Standard Chartered Bank, and United Bank  for Africa.

    He said the activities in which BoI and the SME-friendly banks would collaborate include the provision of long-term loans to qualified SMEs by BoI based on its Risk Acceptance Criteria (RAC) and the provision of working capital to the SMEs by the SME-friendly banks also based on their individual RAC.

    According to Olaoluwa, the MoU is geared towards the development of a virile SME sector in Nigeria, besides acting as a platform for the realisation of the economic transformation objectives of the Federal Government.

    He said with over 17 million Micro Small Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) in Nigeria, according to the National Bureau of Statistics, accounting for over 90 per cent of all companies, employing over 30 million people and accounting for an estimated half of Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), the importance of SMEs to the nation’s economic development cannot be overemphasised.

    He said access to affordable finance is one of the major challenges inhibiting the growth and development of SMEs. He however, noted that investigations revealed that the main factor responsible for the current low level of financial support to SMEs by banks generally and BoI inclusive is the fact that their loan requests are poorly packaged and their business plans non-bankable.

    Pointing the way forward, he said: “BoI has decided on a multi-pronged approach to addressing the problem of poor loan packaging and access to finance.

    “Another strategy is to approach SME-friendly commercial banks to partner with BoI in co-financing the SMEs.”

    Sectors to be financed shall include agro-processing, solid minerals and metals, light manufacturing, logistics, etc. identified under the Nigeria Industrial Revolution Plan (NIRP) launched by the Federal Government recently.

    On the terms of the loans, he said it would be in accordance with BoI term loan with a tenor of three to five years. While the moratorium will be six-12 months, interest rate is between nine and 10 per cent per year. On the other hand, working capital facilities by SME-friendly banks will be on a tenor of 6-12 months; interest rate:  MPR + 6 per cent per annum. Moratorium:    As may be applicable.

    The BoI boss further said: “The synergy that has evolved between BoI and the SME-friendly banks  is unprecedented between a development finance institution and commercial banks, will undoubtedly foster greater access to finance for SMEs, financial inclusion for Nigerians and also engender wealth creation and accelerated job creation for Nigerians.

    ‘’It is also our expectation that the SMEs that will benefit from this partnership will be good corporate citizens and meet their financial obligations to the partnering banks. This will stand them in goodstead for consideration for larger loan amounts with the hope that they will in the near future metamorphose into large enterprises.”

    He commended the SME-friendly banks for exhibiting a developmental orientation, which the economy requires at this point in time.

    Responding, UBA Chief Risk Officer, Mr. Uche said the relationship offers huge opportunity and opens up a new vista for banks in this sector of the economy. He said the synergy with BoI will also address the problem of fund –mismatch, which has bedevilled the sector for a long time, leaving the SMEs to their fate.

    Also, Access Bank Plc Executive Director, Mrs.Titi Osuntoke, said SMEs contribute less than five per cent to the GDP and as a bank will wish to contribute their quota to drive the economy with their firm belief that it is the engine of growth of any economy.

    For the Deputy Managing Director of Diamond Plc, Mrs Caroline Anyanwu, her bank has been in the fore front of SMEs support in the last five years.

    She said the involvement of BoI brings a fresh vista and they were willing to run with vigour more than ever.

    Skye Bank Executive Director, Mrs Ibiye Ekong, pledged the support of the bank for the SMEs and their wish for the real sector to grow and contribute of the economy.

  • ITF, SMEDAN, BoI train 37,000 youths

    Industrial Training Fund, (ITF) said it has trained 37,000 youths in collaboration with Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN) and Bank of Industry (BoI) in two years.

    According to the organisation, the training was carried out under the National Industrial Skills Development Programme (NISDP), which was introduced by the Federal Government two years.

    Director-General, Dr. Juliet Chukkas-Onaeko, made this known in Lagos during an interactive forum with industry stakeholders organised by the Fund.

    She said the theme of the forum, Moving Forward and Succeeding Together is apt and a clarion call for all its stakeholders to join in the Fund strides towards a developed and industrialised Nigeria.

    Onaeko pointed out that no nation develops by merely exporting raw materials without having a booming industrial sector, saying that for this to happen, an adequate number of skilled workforce as a pre-requisite is needed.

    She added that the Fund came up with a four point agenda which are: increase the number of Nigerians trained to two million annually; fully automate ITF business processes and ensure 100 per cent each of collection training contributions as well as implementation of Students Industrial Work Experience Scheme (SIWES).

    She added that the four point agenda is intended to ensure effective service delivery that will add value to the bottom line of clients’ operations and guarantee full actualisation of its mandate.

    “As part of our commitment to building the capacity of middle level manpower in Nigeria, the ITF in conjunction with Nigeria Employers Consultative Association (NECA) has set up a Technical Skills Development Project (TSDP).

    She said: “The project, which currently runs in the facilities of NECA member companies, Peugeot Automobile of Nigeria (PAN) Kaduna, Niger Dock Lagos, Nigerian Breweries and ITF ISTCs in Ikeja and Kano, is set to be expanded to more facilities in order to accept more trainees.”

    She appealed to companies that had failed in their statutory duties change, saying: “it is only when we collectively live up to our responsibilities that our dream of a great Nigeria will be achieved.

  • BoI in new strategy to reposition SMEs

    BoI in new strategy to reposition SMEs

    To reposition Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), the Bank of Industry (BoI) has signed a service agreement with 122 Business Development Service Providers (BDSPs). This may signal a new dawn for SMEs, as it promises to address the challenges of poor packaging of loan requests and non-bankable business plans, which are responsible for the low level of financial support to the sector, Assistant Editors, Chikodi Okereocha and Okwy Iroegbu-Chikezie report.   

    It’s the most revolutionary step in development banking aimed at improving access to finance by Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs). If more credit gets to SMEs, we will create more jobs.”

    There were the words of the Executive Director (SMEs), Bank of Industry (BoI), Mr. Waheed Olagunju, at the signing of the service agreement between BoI and Business Development Service Providers (BDSPs) in Lagos, last week.

    Its Managing Director, Mr. Rasheed Olaoluwa said loans to SMEs accounted for less than 10 per cent of BoI’s total loan portfolio. This is not because there are no loanable funds for SMEs. He identified poor packaging of loan requests and non-bankable business plans as responsible for the low level of financial support to the SME sector. He said it was in recognition of these challenges, as well as in fulfilment of BoI’s mandate of providing long-term finance and business support services to large, medium and small projects, that the bank decided to engage the services of BDSPs.

    At the signing of the agreement, Olaoluwa said the BDSPs would collaborate with BoI to identify credible SMEs that require finance. They would also develop bankable business plans and proposals for SMEs to facilitate  their access to finance.

    That is not all. The BDSPs, who emerged after a rigorous and painstaking selection, would, according to the managing director, provide post-finance services, such as mentorship, handholding, financial advice and inculcation of best practices. They would also support the SMEs to develop synergies and sustainable relationship with large enterprises, industrial buyers, and suppliers along the value chain.

    In opting for a strategic repositioning of SMEs through the agreement with BDSPs, the BoI chief said the bank was encouraged by the importance of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) to the economy. He said, for instance, that figures from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed that there are over 17 million MSMEs in Nigeria, accounting for over 90 per cent of all firms and employing over 30 million people. The enterprises, he added, also account for about half of Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    He pointed out that the launch of the National Enterprise Development Programme (NEDP) by President Goodluck Jonathan underscored the strategic importance of MSMEs to economic development. He said BoI’s role under the NEDEP is to provide long-term finance to viable MSME projects, and that as part of effort to discharge such role, the BoI chose to engage the services of BDSPs.

    For the BDSPs, however, it was not a smooth ride. They emerged after a rigorous selection.  Olaoluwa said: “On July 14, 2014, we published in some national dailies a Request for Proposal (RFP) from prospective BDSPs. Three hundred and thirty-one applications were received nationwide.”

    He said at the end of the evaluation, a total of 122 firms were shortlisted as BDSPs in three categories based on their capacity and their preferred areas. While a total of 28 BDSPs had capacity for national coverage, 74 are to operate on zonal basis, leaving 20 BDSPs with state coverage.

    Explaining how the BDSPs would be remunerated, the BoI boss said there was an initial token fee to be paid by the SME to the BDSP before the submission of the business plan and loan application to BoI. This would be based on a graduated scale. For instance, while an initial token fee of N10, 000 would be paid for a loan of less than N10 million, N25, 000 is for a loan amount of between N10 million and N50 million. A loan amount of between N50 million and N200 million attracts initial token fee of N50, 000.

    “This initial token fee is designed to ensure that SMEs show some commitment to their projects and help to eliminate frivolous applications,” Olaoluwa explained, adding that the total success fee shall be 0.5 per cent of the approved loan amount and shall be payable by BoI as follows: 50 per cent of the total fee payable after the collection of the loan offer letter by the SME; balance of 50 per cent of the total fee payable immediate after the disbursement of the loan by BoI.

    To keep the BDSPs on their toes, there are  some specific performance benchmarks they must satisfy,  failing which they may be delisted by BoI. For instance, they must make full disclosures to BoI on the SMEs and any BDSP that misrepresents facts while processing any loan application shall be blacklisted. Also, business plans and loan applications submitted shall be in accordance with BoI’s RAC and other applicable criteria which shall be communicated to the BDSPs by BoI. Besides, each BDSP is expected to achieve a minimum of 10 successful applications yearly, and any BDSP that fails to achieve a success rate of at least 40 per cent in terms of successful loan applications may be disqualify from the renewal of the agreement.

    With this initiative, BoI has taken a major step to address the deficiency of lack of capacity inherent in most of our SMEs,” the MD said, pointing out that to facilitate regular dialogue and exchange of ideas between BoI and the BDSPs, a closed online user group platform has been created on BoI’s website.

    He, however, clarified that regardless of the appointment of BDSPs, customers are at liberty to apply for loans directly to BoI through any of the bank’s physical offices across tthe country, or digitally inclined customers who are also at liberty to apply through BoI’s online application portal. He expressed optimism that through this partnership, the job and wealth creation objectives of the Federal Government under the NEDEP will be realised.

    Some of the successful BDSPs share Olaoluwa’s optimism over the prospect of bountiful job and wealth creation through the platform of the service agreement. Describing the agreement as “heart-warming and the beginning of a new way of doing things,” Mrs. Folasade Odunaiya, Executive Director, IBFC Alliance Limited, one of the BDSPs, said: “We have a government that is interested in uplifting small businesses to create more jobs.”

    She, however, called on BoI to take a look at the commercial side of the  agreement as the fee is small.

    The Managing Director of Resort Consult Limited, a BDSP, Mr. Femi Ekundayo, agrees with her. “It’s a challenge,” he said, adding however, that the BoI-BDSP partnership is a call to national service. While calling on BoI to empower the BDSPs through training, he noted that the principle of inclusion is what BoI had done.

    Indeed, Ekundayo and other experts believe that the successful co-creation of this SME-business development eco-system signals the beginning of a new dawn for SMEs. Apart from addressing the age-long challenge of lack of capacity in most SMEs in Nigeria, it is expected to help address the low level of financial support to SMEs.