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THE CHALLENGES OF FINANCING SMALL FARMERS AND MSMES IN AFRICA: How Agricultural Value Chain Finance can be a Rescue. By Obiora Madu Trade Development Consultant DG – African Centre for Supply Chain. OUTLINE. OPENING STATEMENTS INTRODUCTION MSME/SMALL FARMER CHALLENGES IN AFRICA
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THE CHALLENGES OF FINANCING SMALL FARMERS AND MSMES IN AFRICA:How Agricultural Value Chain Finance can be a Rescue By Obiora Madu Trade Development Consultant DG – African Centre for Supply Chain
OUTLINE • OPENING STATEMENTS • INTRODUCTION • MSME/SMALL FARMER CHALLENGES IN AFRICA • NEW PERSPECTIVES TO AGRICULTURE • AGRICULTURAL VALUE CHAIN & EVOLUTION OF AVCF FINANCING • VALUE CHAIN FINANCE FLOWS/MINIMUM STANDARDS • SMALL HOLDER FINANCING RISKS & MITIGANTS • THE IMPACT OF EXTERNAL SHOCKS • CASE STUDY – NIGERIA • CONCLUSIONS & RECOMENDATIONS
AGRIC VALUE CHAIN Consumption Retailing Trading Processing Research Trading Communication Post-harvest handling Transportation Government Policies and Regulations Production Input supply Input supply Technical and business training services Financial Services Market Information and Intelligence Source: Adopted from Ferris (2007)
MAJOR CHALLENGES OF SMES IN AFRICA • Access to finance had been singled out as one of the major challenge impeding the survival and growth of start-up SMEs in Africa. • Incidence of multiplicity of regulatory agencies and taxes which has always resulted in high cost of doing business. • Corruption, lack of transparency, very high bureaucratic costs. • Poor or Missing Infrastructure: African agriculture generally suffers from major competitiveness constraints due to poor or missing infrastructure.
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Defining Value Chain Finance Value chain finance – financial products and services flowing to and/or through a VC to address the needs of those involved in that chain, be it a need for finance, a need to secure sales, procure products, reduce risk and/or improve efficiency within the chain. VCF Approach – to understand the value chain and its participant needs and structure finance and services to best address them. • Objectives: • Align and structure financial products to fit the chain • Reduce costs and risks of finance
VCF: Demand side Demand Needs of finance Input suppliers Seeds, fertilizers, pesticides, livestock feed, medicines, farm equipment Growers Farmers, dairy units, fisheries and other livestock growers Storage & warehousing Storage facilities for grains, fruits vegetables; cold chains & logistics Processors Processing plants, packaging facilities etc. Retailers & wholesalers Inventory, trading & marketing Exporters Pre & post-shipment commitments
Tools to Mitigate Market Risks • Use of futures and options • Warehouse receipts as well as warehouse storage capacity • Market information services • Contract farming • Insurance • Access to technical assistance Some risk management tools are more practical for agro-industries and wholesalers, but can stabilize prices and reduce risks for all producers and bankers.
MINIMUM STANDARDS & KPIs FOR SUCCESS • The provision of credit, savings, guarantees or insurance to or among value chain actors • The creation of strategic alliances through financing extended by a combination of value chain actors and financial institutions • The offering of tools/services to manage price, production or marketing risks • Design sustainable value chain finance interventions. • Facilitate information flow from the value chain to financial markets. • Design interventions with ‘integrated components’ that focus on increasing access to finance.
(CASE STUDY - NIGERIA NIRSAL) Nigeria Incentive-based Risk Sharing System For Agricultural Lending NIRSAL ($500m assets to stimulate lending financial institutions) 1 5 1 2 3 4 5 • Insurance • Facility ($30m) • Risk • sharing • Facility ($300m) Technical assistance facility ($60m) Agricultural bank rating scheme ($100m) Bank incentive mechanism ($10m) Goal • Link insurance products to the loan provided by the banks to loan beneficiaries • Build the capacity of banks, micro-finance institutions • Build capacity of agricultural value chains • Expand financial inclusion • Rate banks according to their effectiveness of lending to agriculture. • Targeted incentives that move banks to a long term, strategic position and commitment to agricultural lending • Shares lending risks with banks (e.g. 50% loss incurred) Expand bank lending in agricultural value chains NIRSAL Objective Build long-term capacity Institutionalise incentives for agriculture lending De-risk agriculture finance value chain
Fixing the Broken Agri Chain Production Supply Chain Processing Marketing • Poor extension • Supply of inputs • Low productivity • Outdated farming • practices • High wastage • Lack of storage • Poor transportn. • Many • intermediaries • No assured • supply of inputs • Lack of • processing facility • Technology • Poor infrastructure • Lack of grading • No market • linkages Broken chain increases credit risk, increases cost of produce and limits credit flow