Audio By Carbonatix
Contrary to the view that the private sector - and more especially Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) - propels the economic growth of developing countries, most of these SMEs in the country are being denied access to loans by a considerable number of commercial banks for lack of adequate bookkeeping.
“How can we develop this country collectively - when those who are supposed to facilitate the take-off of the economy apply complex and prohibitive lending procedures to refuse loans to these SMEs on the grounds that they lack basic bookkeeping to enable them qualify for loans?” Nana Dwomo Sarpong, an Accra business executive, queried.
Nana Sarpong, who is also an ardent advocate on environmental issues, drew a parallel to this delicate issue with developed economies, explaining that in advanced countries like the US and others, SMEs can easily access the services of chartered accountants to prepare their bookkeeping to enable them become credible to the banks.
He said in Ghana those SMEs which could not convince their banks for loans are requested to provide collateral, especially immovable assets worth millions of cedis. He asked: “How can these people provide this collateral to enable them access loans?” The result is that these SMEs, which are the solution to the intractable unemployment problem facing the country, will continue to remain in the state they find themselves.
Nana Sarpong disclosed that some banks in the country promote their banks with perceived low base rates - e.g. 22%. Unknowingly, people see it as a good rate for loan; but the fact is that these banks hide a facility fee of 0.5%-1% and borrowing fee of 4% among others, which raises the base rate to about 27-28% and the borrower has to contend it with during the period of repayment. He urged the banks to factor all these fees into their base rates for the public to decide which bank offers the best rates.
Nana Sarpong also accused some banks in the country of making huge profit out of indirect borrowing from their clients’ deposits at their expense. He said what the country needs now is continuous improvement by the SMEs for the economy to grow.
Source: By Kwame Mensah/B&FT/Ghana
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
-
Celestine Donkor launches road-safety campaign in collaboration with Road Safety Authority
10 minutes -
New Road Maintenance Trust Fund board tasked to ensure fair, nationwide allocation of resources
13 minutes -
Mahama urges stronger global partnerships to transform Africa’s healthcare future
15 minutes -
ECOWAS declares regional state of emergency over rising coups, security threats
18 minutes -
Activa Insurance supports education with ICT lab donation to Korle Gonno Community Library
28 minutes -
Gov’t developing central health intelligence database – Health minister
35 minutes -
The McCarthy Hill School wins 2025 Kofi A. Tawiah Good Citizenship Challenge
38 minutes -
Ghanaian cocoa communities mobilised against galamsey to protect livelihoods and environment
42 minutes -
China’s former sports administration chief handed suspended death sentence
44 minutes -
Okyenhene rules on Kyebi Zongo chieftaincy dispute, declares Alhaji Sanusi as validly elected
44 minutes -
They don’t ask for permission before using my songs – Stella Seal
49 minutes -
Audit Service rejects calls for restatement of MIIF 2024 financials; flags concerns over Agyapa
51 minutes -
Botswana government fulfil house promise to 200m Paris Olympics gold medallist Tebogo
59 minutes -
Wode Maya: Africa’s cultural diplomat championing tourism through digital storytelling
1 hour -
UESD @5: Seth Terkper hails rapid growth but warns infrastructure gaps are slowing progress
1 hour
