Audio By Carbonatix
Firstbanc Financial Services is to vote GH¢10 million each year to prop local Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) to the point where they would be responsive to export opportunities.
In collaboration with the National Board, the funding partners and the National Board for Small Scale Industries (NBSSI), the company will on September 15th 2009 launch its SME Centre to provide advisory and professional services to kick start the project.
In a statement copied to journalists on Thursday, Ms. Diana Owusu Antwi, the SME Centre Project Coordinator said, the idea is to promote matching of domestic business opportunities and international linkages to enable SMEs evolve their domestic businesses into an export driven model.
“The FirstBanc SME Centre is tailored to provide Management Information Services, business support and acceleration services to SMEs as well as industry expertise and identify opportunities in the market that SMEs can exploit.
“In addition, SMEs in need of funding will be linked to our funding partners,” she explained.
The SME Advisory Global, Ms. Owusu Antwi said, would offer creative advice to existing SMEs on the choice of financial instruments available to them in the financial markets.
“Ultimately, we aim at moving a large section of SMEs out of the informal sector to the formal sector, a merger between groups of SMEs as well as a listing of some SMEs on the Ghana Stock Exchange”, Ms Owusu-Antwi said.
For the SME Professional, she said, it is a special package directed at graduates, who plan to set up their own private businesses as well as enterprises with few years of experience that wish to expand.
The centre, she noted, would then assess their growth potential and opportunities and prescribe an appropriate means of funding or assistance.
She added that the essence was to assist enterprises seeking funding to undertake research, product development and innovations among other things.
SMEs in Ghana form about 82% of the business community and with information asymmetry and the high-risk perception of their activities, it is difficult for most of them to access funding for their operations.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Meet Emelia Naa Ayeley Aryee, the Ghanaian Gender Advocate helping couples overcome infertility stigma
2 minutes -
Oil pulls back as traders look for progress on US-Iran talks
48 minutes -
The proposed imposition of a 0.75% fee on Mobile Money-To-Bank transfers raises serious concerns regarding fairness, financial inclusion, and the underlying principle of interoperability within the digital financial ecosystem
49 minutes -
Trump raises refugee ceiling by 10,000 to bring in more white South Africans
55 minutes -
One killed and others missing after chemical explosion at US paper mill
1 hour -
First Ghanaians set to be repatriated from South Africa over anti-immigrant protests
1 hour -
Deliver or be questioned – Majority Chief Whip warns OSP
1 hour -
Crime is everywhere – Dafeamekpor slams OSP’s Accra-centred operations
2 hours -
Don’t be cocooned in Accra – Dafeamekpor pushes OSP to invade districts
2 hours -
Free sanitary pads and pad bank Initiative cut teenage pregnancy in Bosomtwe – Girl Child coordinator
2 hours -
Asunafo North Municipal Assembly deploys DL-Rev Software to tackle revenue shortfall
3 hours -
General Mosquito promised to ‘annihilate’ NPP – Dafeamekpor reveals details of earlier tour
3 hours -
Asiedu Nketia has been touring since 2021, not plotting new campaign, says Dafeamekpor
3 hours -
Apple, Google push for judicial oversight in Canada online safety bill
3 hours -
Micron joins $1 trillion club as AI race powers memory chip boom
4 hours