TRADE MINISTRY, SMEDAN PLAN MSMEs ACADEMY
The Federal Government, through the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade, and Investment has begun talks with the United Nations Industrial Development Organization to set up a formal academy to train and equip small business operators with the requisite knowledge to help their day-to-day activities and deepen their contributions to the country’s economic growth.
The Ministry, the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria, and UNIDO will develop the framework for the academy and design the implementation plan to kick-start the project.
The idea, mooted by the Minister for Industry, Trade, and Investment, Dr. Doris Uzoka-Anite at a meeting with the UNIDO delegation led by Jean Bakole, is to develop the operators in the sector through several strategies that will upgrade their production skills and access to credit, help them with links to the market and deepen their capabilities to service the big industries.
The idea was prompted by the high rate of collapse of small businesses that lack the requisite knowledge to survive Nigeria’s market realities
Recall the SMEDAN DG, Charles Odii, on Wednesday, revealed that the country lost over three million businesses in three months to insecurity, fraud, global competitiveness, and lack of ease of doing business
“The statistics for success as a startup are very bad. Five out of 100 survive, and a lot of it goes to issues including inability to access credit, and the link to the market that needs their services,” stated the Minister on Thursday in Abuja.
“We want to help them overcome market challenges, and we will look at different models and consider those models that helped China and India churn out successful start-ups and unicorns. We will adopt and domesticate whatever model that made China and India strong SME and industrial countries”, she added
The training school will be a departure from the current practice of random training programmes that are conceived and run by different institutions, including banks, but which in the long run, have no impact on the MSME sector and contribute nothing to the economy.
“Let us have a training school, a business finishing school where our SMEs will come in, even if it is for a three-month programme covering principles of accounting, marketing, and other areas of which they must show a good understanding, to get a certificate and also qualify for access to credit.”
“We will partner with existing schools like the Lagos Business School and universities to design the curriculum and also form a consortium of partners that will include SMEDAN, the Bank of Industry, and other organizations that can help fund the training school.
“That way, I am sure we will have trained MSMEs that can lead this country to real economic growth”, the Minister noted
Bakole stated that UNIDO will play a huge role in the project, having attended to several SMEs in the past using several tools like it did during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The UN body will employ a strategy similar to what it used to identify 174 sanitizer manufacturers across the country, which it trained for two weeks and provided with equipment during the pandemic. It will also support them for a year,” he said.