THE Federal Government Nigeria’s National Enterprise Development Programme,
may have unlocked N3 billion fund for micro enterprises across the
federation from January to September 2013.
The
development,according to the Minister ofTrade,Industry and
Investment,Olusegun Aganga,has bolstered direct micro-enterprise funding
in the country,”to further demonstrate the commitment of the current
administration to developing enterprises at the grass roots,in order to
create jobs, enhance growth and ultimately reduce poverty.”
Aganga
spoke through his Senior Special Assistant on Corporate Communications,
Mrs. Yemi Kolapo, who received the “Star Ambassador of Nigerian Women
Business Journalists” award on the sidelines of the World
Bank/International Monetary Fund meetings, in Washington, DC, United
States.
He said NEDEP provided the necessary platform for the
sustainable ongoing funding of the micro enterprises, adding that the
programme, through the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency
of Nigeria’s business development training, also ensured the financial
readiness of the micro enterprises and, thus, their ability to repay the
disbursed loans.
Micro enterprises are businesses with less than
10 employees and or less than N5 million in assets (excluding land and
buildings). They currently represent 99.87 per cent of Nigeria’s MSME
population.
According to the minister, NEDEP is an initiative
spearheaded by the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment
and its three parastatals – the Bank of Industry, SMEDAN and the
Industrial Training Fund. Businesses can benefit from the opportunities
the programme provides by getting in touch with any of the three
agencies.
He said:“The Federal Government is deepening its
interventions at the grass roots by implementing new initiatives in each
State and local government of the federation. Over the last 3 months
SMEDAN (the government agency responsible for developing the MSME
sector) has expanded its operational footprint, and the agency is now
present in every state of the federation, a remarkable feat within such a
short period. This will enable it to provide the necessary support, in
an efficient manner, in the different states.
“Nigeria has over 17
million MSMEs, according to the survey carried out by SMEDAN, in
collaboration with the National Bureau of Statistics, and employs over
32 million people in Nigeria. Most Nigerians are employed in this sector
and future job growth in Nigeria, like in most developed countries, is
expected to come from this sector. SMEDAN’s new decentralised operating
model will fast-track the One Local Government One Product Programme,
which will ensure that each of the 774 local governments in Nigeria
develops sectors based on their areas of comparative advantage.”
Aganga
also pointed out that the Industrial Training Fund, an agency under the
supervision his ministry, had just completed the training of 14,000
youths within the second Phase of its National Industrial Skills and
Development Programme.
He said the completion of the second phase
of the youth training brought the total number of youths trained under
the programme to 24,000 youths in 23 States plus the Federal Capital
Territory, over the last eight months.
He added:“ITF has also
commenced the third phase of the programme in 13 States, which covers
the rest of the country. The needs in each local government are
different because the comparative advantages are not the same. The
skills developments have covered areas like welding, construction, food
processing, quarrying, agriculture and aquaculture,
electrical\electronics, light manufacturing and many more. Each training
programme lasts for three months to develop basic or intermediate
proficiency.
“However, the most important thing now is that our
focus is on ‘Train-to-Work’. As the youths are trained, they are linked
directly with the requisite jobs. This is the only way to make the right
impact.”
The guardian news paper on 17/10/2013
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