Besides,
African countries have been urged to legislate factoring and take advantage of
its opportunities for expanding the continent’s regional value chains.
Reiterating
this call, the Managing Director of the Intra-African Trade Initiative at the
African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank), Kanayo
Awani, lamented that despite the potential upside, Africa’s small and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) continued to face difficulties in accessing
finance.
Speaking
at the opening of the two-day Regional Conference on Factoring in Dakar, Senegal,
Awani, who is also Chairperson of Factors
Chain International (FCI) Africa Chapter, noted that in other regions, such
enterprises accounted for the largest shares of trade finance transactions
concluded through factoring.
According
to her, in Europe, factoring represented 10.4 per cent of Gross Domestic
Product at 1.5 trillion Euros. Conversely, Africa only accounted for one per
cent of global factoring transactions, a low volume that is largely
attributable to lack of information and awareness.
The
conference, co-organised by Afreximbank
and FCI, the global representative
body for the factoring and receivables finance industry, she said, was to equip
participants with relevant tools to tap into the opportunities available to
grow factoring in the continent, especially in the context of intra-regional
trade.
But
the Secretary-General of FCI, Peter
Mulroy, affirmed that despite the low factoring level in Africa, the
continent had achieved important milestones that could help develop it further
in the years to come.
“Today we are witnessing the birth of numerous initiatives at the
government, ministerial and central bank levels in such markets as Cameroon,
Nigeria, Ghana and others.
“This is, in part, thanks to the development of the model law on
factoring by Afreximbank, the removal of burdensome stamp duty tax, the
development of inclusive policies at the central bank level to promote and
support financing to SMEs through factoring, and the push for development of
cross-border factoring,” he
added. (Guardian)
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