Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) current a big alternative for Africa to construct on the constructive fintech momentum to develop GDP – however we have to cease desirous about formalising them and as an alternative present additional fintech options that bridge data gaps and meet their credit score wants.
SME’s Engine of Africa’s Economic system
SMEs, together with micro merchants and micro-SMEs, are the engine of Africa’s financial system. They make up 90% of the whole variety of registered companies and make use of 80% of working Africans. With Africa contributing 3% to world GDP in opposition to a 17% contribution to world inhabitants, it’s clear that there stays an amazing alternative for African economies to develop their GDP contributions.
However we aren’t going to get higher at fixing these structural challenges by ‘formalising’ the SME phase within the conventional approach. We have to reasonably reshape our options to handle related issues and make the most of the alternatives they current.
Deal with Elevating Micro Merchants
The untapped potential lies in elevating micro merchants, micro-SMEs, and SMEs at massive by facilitating entry to markets, giving them extra alternatives to supply, promote, and entry capital.
That is actually the obvious alternative for Fintech in Africa. And notably as a result of there has already been a lot fintech success in sub-Saharan Africa.
They’ve revolutionised the retail monetary companies phase by leveraging an current cell ecosystem to develop new applied sciences, notably in East Africa (Kenya and Tanzania) and West Africa (Ghana, Ivory Coast, and Nigeria).
Speedy Rise of Cell Cash Account Holders
For the primary time this yr, the variety of energetic cell cash account holders in Africa breached 50% of the whole inhabitants to go above 750 million, with half of the brand new accounts opened within the final 5 years of the expertise’s 17-year existence.
Many of those account holders are ladies merchants within the fast-moving client items (FMCG) and agricultural sectors who’ve transformed from money cost methods to the extra environment friendly and safer mannequin of cell cash.
This rise in cell cash adoption has resulted in an emergence of recent entrepreneurs reminiscent of cell brokers the place a area like Nigeria noticed a 41% improve within the variety of brokers this yr.
Fintechs now make up roughly 85% of retail cross-border funds in sub-Saharan Africa, with conventional banks solely facilitating 15% of those flows. This has laid the groundwork for additional alternative for SMEs.
The important thing structural challenges dealing with SMEs in Africa are primarily registration pink tape together with Know Your Buyer (KYC) verification processes, available information required by potential company and institutional clients and capital suppliers trying to associate with gamers within the phase. Entry to credible monetary data can be an issue.
Leverage Present Relationships
To deal with these challenges, ecosystems reminiscent of cooperatives in agri- and agro-processing and FMCG wholesale distributors to the micro-SME phase may be accessed by leveraging these current relationships and behaviours for vetting and KYC functions.
This method is superior to the standard, paperwork heavy, gradual and bureaucratic means like monetary statements – and can tremendously improve credit score decision-making. By digitising the flows in these ecosystems we are able to tackle data asymmetry, lack of audit path and credible monetary data to develop embedded finance options.
Utilizing current ecosystems will de-risk micro-traders, micro-SMEs, and SMEs in these ecosystems as a result of there’s set construction, current relationships, belief, and preliminary data and information to evaluate which is able to doubtless be offline however may be transferred to a web-based setting.
We additionally see conventional banks opening up their capabilities for vetting and KYC to 3rd events with the danger urge for food to do enterprise in these under-serviced ecosystems.
By Onke Mkiva, co-head of the Know-how, Media, and Telecommunications sector at RMB