Title: AFD
1AFDs approach to SME finance
- Pierre Jacquet
- French Development Agency (AFD)
- Presentation at the
- German Marshall Fund of the United States
- 22 october 2007
2Outline
- Vantage point a bilateral development agency
interested in making finance and markets work
for the poors and in contributing to global
governance - The missing middle obstacles to SME
development - Examples of various solutions
3Background What is AFD? (1/4)A development
Agency
- The French Bilateral Development Agency
- The main Operator for French bilateral
Development Assistance - Untied aid
- Headquarters in Paris and Marseilles, 41 field
offices - Partnerships with multi and bi-lateral donors
- staff exchanges with KFW, EIB, ADB, WB group
- close relationships with European donors, JBIC,
AfDB, DAC members, etc. - Active in over 60 emerging and developing
countries and in French overseas territories
Africa, Mediterranean, Asia, Latin America
(Brazil), Caribbean
4Background What is AFD? (2/4)A development Bank
- Development Bank
- Public financial institution, under French
banking regulation - UN Global Compact member
- Comprehensive Range of Financial and non
financial Tools - Grants, concessional and non-concessional loans,
equity, quasi-equity, guarantees - Technical assistance
- Large Customer Basis
- Sovereign, non sovereign public, private, PPP
- Balance Sheet Total 16bn
- AAA rating
5Background What is AFD? (3/4)A strong increase
in commitments
AFD has doubled the volume of its commitments
over the last five years
6Background What is AFD? (4/4)A expansion of
AFDs geographical coverage
Amman (2006)
Cairo (2007)
Today
Lagos ?
Luanda ?
Djakarta (2007)
Saana (2007)
Dehli (2007)
Brasilia (2007)
Port Louis (2006)
Islamabad (2007)
7AFDs vision of ODAA public policy for
globalisation
- Solving collective problems
- with a North-South dimension
Evolving development challenges
- Multiple actors
- (providers and recipients)
- States
- Development agencies
- IFIs,
- Local governments,
- Foundations,
- NGOs
- Public and private companies
- N/S poverty gap Inequalities ? MDGs
- Development through Growth ? GDP
- New targets
- ? Global Public Goods
? ODA as a catalyser of development finance
8AFDs visionA new public service for
globalisation
9SMEs in developing countries What about Africa ?
- Subsaharan growth of 5,6 in 2006
- Significant increase of investments in Africa
- 10 times as many companies listed on subsaharan
stock exchanges in 2007 than in 2000 - Creation of panafrican investment funds (US 3
bn in 2007) - SMEs, backbone of the economy in developing
countries - Senegal 80 of the companies have less than 20
employees - But very limited funds accessible to SMEs
- Private Credit to GDP averages 18 in Africa (27
in South Asia and 109 in developed countries) - IFC finance typically goes to large-sized
companies
10Obstacles to private sector development
- Poor and insufficient infrastructure
- First handicap to business for 43 of African
companies access to electricity and factor
costs - Infrastructure needs estimated at US 29 bn per
year - AFD 554 million in 2007 to finance new
infrastructure - Business environment
- Poor governance, corruption, weak, inefficient
regulation, underdeveloped legal systems - Gender discrimination
- Lack of training, standards and management skills
- Access to finance (loans and equity)
- Predominance of the informal economy
- Limited funds, lack of adequate financial
instruments - Lack of training
11Capacity building
- Enhancing competitiveness in Tunisia (program
called mise à niveau of companies) - Capacity building for an MFI (Zakoura) and its
customers in Morocco training for management,
exercizing rights, gender equality, healty - Support to SME development in Vietnam
(co-financing with AsDB and KfW) - Improving the legal and regulatory environment,
notably with respect to land tenure - Simplification of the financial documentation
necessary to access bank credit - Develop technical standards to improve acess to
markets for exports
12developing accessibility and deepening the
financial sector
- 1. Deepening our intervention in the microfinance
sector - Since 1988, 267 million invested mainly in
Africa (50 institutions) - CGAPs June 2006 Peer review recommends to
increase AFDs operations and finance support - The goal scaling up existing MFIs
- 2. Reaching SMEs through innovative schemes
- Making commercial banks operations accessible
- Risk sharing schemes through guarantee funds
- Access to equity
- 3. Strengthening direct support to banks or on
financial markets
13by using a wide range of financial tools
- AFD is able to use a wide range of tools
- Financial instruments equity, quasi-equity,
soft loans, mobilizing local resources through
credit enhancement, risk sharing schemes,
subsidies - Non-financial tools capacity building
- PROPARCO, a branch dedicated to private sector
14- Strengthening MFIsExample of Al Amana in Morocco
- Al Amana 404.000 clients (12/2006), first MFI
in MENA - But very small loans (in average 200) and only
to solidarity groups ? no effect on SMEs
development - AFD objective help Al Amana to serve more SMEs,
develop new products and change scale - AFD operates through a combination of
concessional and private, financial and
knowledge-based instruments - A direct long term 10 million soft loan to the
MFI - Quasi-equity through PROPARCO ( 10 million)
- Random impact evaluation (with MIT) on rural areas
151. Strenghtening MFIs Example of the financial
bond issue by Faulu Kenya, MFI in Africa
- Amount 500M KES ( 5,52M 03/12/03)
- Maturity 5 years
- 25 of the risk supported by the subscribers
(commercial banks and institutional investors) - 75 guaranteed by AFD
- 24 000 beneficiaries
Conclusion guarantees as a means to catalyze
local institutions access to the local financial
market The guarantee problem (DAC/OECD)
162. Reaching SMEs through innovative schemes
Example of a guarantee fund ARIZ Fund
- Danone leader in its market extending the reach
to the bottom of the pyramid. - Mechanism dedicated SPV 90 invested in low risk
assets, 10 invested in high risk bottom of the
pyramid assets. - ARIZ (AFD fund) guaranteeing 50 of the equity
risk investment.
172. Reaching SMEs through innovative schemesUOBs
ASEAN-PRC providing equity in SMEs
- UOBs ASEAN-PRC investment fund to promote the
development of small and medium enterprises in
Asean countries and China with a total size of
USD 60M - PROPARCO invested USD 5 M in the fund (2003) and
sits on the Investment Committee - A unique combination of a strong private sponsor,
UOB bank of Singapore, and major public
institutions ADB, China Development Bank,
Proparco, Swiss SIFEM. - A new concept in the region Private Equity for
SMEs, with a focus on regional integration (most
other funds target large transactions) - A complete success three years on high impacts,
several SMEs have already IPOed in Singapore,
good leverage on UOBs network and DFIs SME
private equity experience
182. Reaching SMEs through innovative schemes
Finance and support entrepreneurship in Africa
- A rather unique approach financing SME and VSE
in Africa - Launched in 2002
- Mobilized around 17m from private investors and
international institution - Launched by seasoned Private Equity
professionals, looking to bring high Private
Equity standards to mesofinance - Brought financing to 15 SMEs in Africa and 8
IMF worldwide - Proparco invested 5m together with EIB in 2006
- Long term commitment to support entrepreneurs in
terms of financing and management - Deeply involved in the definition and the
assessment of the business plan - Hands-on follow-up of the company requested and
appreciated by the entrepreneur based on trust
and solid human relationships - No pressure on the entrepreneur regarding the
timeline of exit
- Balanced investment strategy to ensure financial
sustainability - Partly invested in short and medium term debt
financing to well established IMFs, in order to
secure a minimum flow of revenues for IP - Partly invested in long term equity financing to
young companies, with promising/adequate business
models and sustainable business plans
193. Strengthening banksExample of credit lines in
Lebanon
- Decision taken in September 06, immediately after
the conflict ended - First three credit agreements signed in January
07 - Non sovereign concessional loans, in tranches
banks must use concessionality to provide more
favorable credit conditions to their SME clients
affected by the conflict (physical damages and /
or losses in activity) with auditing mechanisms
to monitor the use of funds prior to the
disbursement of following tranches
20and an increasing trend in figures Local
government, private sector, NGOs
21Expected impacts of 2006 commitments
Impact
Action
AFD participation in direct SME
finance Financing microfinance institutions
Subsidized loans for investment in overseas
departments and territories
-
- 630 million raised for 1,500 enterprises
- 1.54 million new beneficiaries
- 132 million of investment generated 3,500 jobs
for 1,430 enterprises
22More to comeWhen and how to use public money
for private sector development
- Adapting to volatility counter-cyclical loans
(cotton) - Transferring resources to compensate for market
gaps environmental line of credit for banks - Covering risk for the poorest
- Reinventing non-sovereign tools in fragile states
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