Kanayo
Awani, Managing Director, Intra-African Trade Initiative,
Afreximbank, addressing the 2019 Afreximbank Factoring Workshop in
Durban, South Africa.
The
African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) has urged the use of open
account terms for trade in Africa in order to facilitate the
realization of the intra-African trade aspirations of the African
Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and to enhance competitiveness.
Kanayo
Awani, Managing Director of the Intra-African Trade Initiative at
Afreximbank, told guests yesterday during the opening of the 2019
Afreximbank Factoring Workshop in Durban, South Africa, that while
letters of credit were relatively expensive and cumbersome, open
account transactions were cheaper and simply involved a business
selling its receivables (invoices) at a discount to a third party
called a factor.
She
noted that access to finance remained a daunting challenge for most
African companies, particularly small and medium-sized enterprises
(SMEs) and that, according to Global Banking and Finance Review
magazine, SMEs face refusal for 53 per cent of their trade finance
applications.
“The
continent needs factors to fill the trade finance gap and to support
SMEs that cannot obtain traditional bank funding,” argued the
Managing Director.
Ms.
Awani added that factoring was necessary to help deal with the
significant reduction in correspondent banking relationships in
Africa, saying that sales in open account terms had highlighted that
banks and non-bank financial institutions had the capability to
access the global correspondent factoring network of Factors Chain
International (FCI) to support international trade in a compliant,
risk-managed manner.
Afreximbank
was continuing to create awareness, demonstrate the relevance, and
highlight the potency of factoring in Africa as part of its
commitment to supporting the operationalization of the AfCFTA, she
said.
That
effort was also in keeping with the Bank’s ambition to use
factoring as an instrument to implement its Intra-African Trade and
its Industrialisation and export Development strategies, continued
Ms. Awani.
Aysen
Cetintas, Education Director of FCI, gave a rundown of the
organisation’s work in support of factoring across the world,
explaining that FCI was active in many countries.
Siza
Sibande, Head of the Department of Economic Development, Tourism and
Environmental Affairs of Kwazulu-Natal Province of South Africa, told
the participants that the province had introduced SME financing in
order to boost economic development.
The
workshop, with the theme “Promoting Factoring in Support of
Intra-African Trade and the African Continental Free Trade Area”,
covered such topics as factoring and receivables finance; factoring
as a solution to intra-African trade promotion; key success factors
in setting up factoring activities; managing risk in factoring
transactions; and insurance in factoring.
It
featured panel discussions and sessions on Afreximbank’s
initiatives for factoring and on the legal and regulatory environment
for factoring in Africa.
The
one-day workshop was organised by Afreximbank, in collaboration with
FCI, for learning and capacity-building aimed at enabling African
countries to further develop alternative sources of trade finance in
order to address the widening trade finance gap and limited liquidity
across the continent.
About
100 representatives drawn from financial institutions, legal and
regulatory entities across Africa participated in the workshop.
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