Title: TOWARDS A ROBUST FRAMEWORK FOR DEVELOPING MSMEs IN NIGERIA
1TOWARDS A ROBUST FRAMEWORK FOR DEVELOPING MSMEs
IN NIGERIA
- BY
- M.A. ADELAJA (MRS)
- DIRECTOR-GENERAL
- SMEDAN
-
- BEING THE KEYNOTE ADDRESS AT THE STAKEHOLDERS
CONSULTATIVE FORUM ON SMEs - THE NIGERIAN ECONOMIC SUMMIT GROUP
- THURSDAY, 14TH SEPTEMBER, 2006.
2Outline of Presentation
- Importance of MSMEs
- Performance of Nigerian and Global MSMEs
- MSME Importance in Figures
- Why the Gap in the Performance of African SMEs
vis-à-vis their Peers in Europe and Asia? - Strategies for Closing the Gap and Improving SME
Performance - What SMEDAN is Doing
- Conclusion
3Importance of MSMEs
- MSMEs a central force in the economic growth
and development of many nations - Have reputation for employment generation,
economic empowerment and, by implication poverty
alleviation - Ubiquitous, therefore accelerating more evenly
spread development in nations - Quickly adapt to changing circumstances, with
their potential to innovate giving them a
critical edge in the market place - Some statistics to underline MSME importance...
4The place of SMEs globally and specifically in
Africa
?
?
?
? Industrial sector figures only
5Why the Gap in the Performance of African MSMEs
vis-à-vis their Peers in Europe and Asia?
- Two major reasons
- First is the difference in the motive for going
into business (most African SMEs are necessity
entrepreneurs, lured by unemployment and poverty
into business as a means of survival unlike
their counterparts in Europe and Asia, who are
opportunity entrepreneurs in business in
pursuit of market opportunities) - Second are a combination of internal and external
constraints which Nigerian MSMEs face
6Factors Behind the Gaps contd
Weak Infrastructure
EXTERNAL GAPS
Weak Access To Finance
Zero book record
Lacks corporate governance
Low Education
GAPS
INTERNAL
Informal Operation
Acts and thinks locally
Financial Miss-management
Operating Environmental Challenges
Unfair Competition
7Strategies for Closing the Gap and Improving SME
Performance
8What SMEDAN is Doing
SMEDAN
Business Information
Business Development Services
Enterprise networking/ Cluster Formation
Advocacy Improved Operating environment
MSME Policy
9Conclusion
- Empowering the small business promoter. Four
major elements required - transform existing necessity entrepreneurs to
opportunity entrepreneurs - deal with the weaknesses inherent in the MSMEs
with BDS and - deal with the challenges imposed by the operating
environment with emphasis on infrastructure
(especially power and workspace), the
legal/regulatory environment and access to
finance - Seeing MSME development as a value chain matter
from project conception to the product/market
place - Failure in these areas would make the ECOWAS CET
(Common External Tariff) a threat to our MSMEs - Such failure would also aggravate the poverty
cycle - As the premier institution for MSME development
in Nigeria, SMEDAN believes in partnership with
public and private sector institutions to
champion the cause for MSME development in
Nigeria - Other institutions should appreciate the
statutory role of the Agency and align/harmonise
their functions accordingly
10Conclusion (Contd)
Poverty life cycle
poverty
Conflict
Unemployment
Diseases
11Conclusion (Contd)
- Without getting involved in direct production,
the government has a catalytic role to play in
boosting the productivity of the MSME sector, if
the percentage of those living below 1 per day
must be halved by 2015 - But government intervention must be within a
market-friendly framework (e.g. subsidizing
purchase of BDS from private service providers
rather providing it directly) - The Nigerian government may also require the
support of the international community and
multilateral agencies to strengthen the MSMEs - But a lot depends on us ourselves, within the
framework of NEEDS I NEEDS II (just around the
corner)
12THANKS FOR YOUR ATTENTION