DAI Global Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises Advisor Jobs in Malawi
Purpose
The Government of Malawi (GoM) recognizes the private sector as a key driver of growth, and that development of the sector is important for job creation. Empirical studies have identified that 90 percent of jobs in developing countries are provided by the private sector and recommend that private sector development should be at the core of any response to unemployment challenges.
Access to finance has been identified as the main business growth constraint for MSMEs in Malawi. According to the World Economic Forum (WEF) Global Index 2016/2017, lack of access to finance is considered the biggest obstacle to doing business, even more than inflation, corruption and inadequate infrastructure. In Malawi, over 90 percent of financing from banks goes to a handful of large firms that dominate the economy.
This level of resource capture is much higher than in most countries and significantly limits opportunities for smaller firms to develop and contribute to the economy. Access to finance to MSMEs is limited by multiple supply factors, including high interest rates, short loan tenors, excessive collateral requirements, and limited products tailored to MSMEs.
MSMEs’ access to finance is further complicated by weaknesses in the enabling environment and poor financial infrastructure. To mitigate the credit risk, in many cases lenders substitute the lack of information on MSMEs with higher collateral requirements.
However, these substitutions have still not sufficiently incentivized banks to lend to MSMEs in environments where contract enforcement is problematic and financial infrastructure is not well developed. Most of the available bank credit is short term in nature as financial institutions rely on short-term deposits to finance lending. Limited maturity transformation affects the provision of longer-term financing that is needed for certain sectors such as agriculture. The capital market is also small and unsophisticated.
Rapid growth of bilateral corporate debt transactions would be better served by more market-based instruments (e.g., on the stock exchange), which foster the development of long-term finance through better risk sharing. There is a need for quality long-term assets to match insurance policy holders’ risk-return expectations. Further, specific expertise is needed to support financial deepening and the development of alternative assets that better service the private sector.
U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) has made available a financial commitment of four transactions under a partnership with U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) African Union and the African Union Development Agency (AUDA-NEPAD).
The new projects mobilize $74 million total to expand access to financing for African micro-, small- and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) in Nigeria, Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia. For Malawi specifically, a $10 million loan portfolio guaranty, made possible with $5 million in DFC exposure, will expand access to finance for small- and medium-sized enterprises, with a focus on the agriculture, clean cooking, fisheries, and sustainable forestry sectors in Malawi
Objectives
A key observation identified is the lack of technical capacity available to assist responsive loan application forms/documents to source access to finance. Additionally, some investment ready applications are rejected because of their failure to correctly package and present the required information and documentation in the format that the Financial Institutions require.
The objective is to engage a consultant to support a cohort of 30 MSMEs for investor readiness technical support. An essential requirement is for MSME applicants is to have access to technical assistance (TA) to ensure that the MSME all loan applications are in fact investor ready (financial statement/governance structure/ collateral availability/cash flow affordability, amongst other, and that business applications are not start-up businesses but already operationally established).
Responsibilities
ATI is seeking a consultant with available capacity and relevant experience to support the Malawi Buy-in to increase the investor-readiness profile of identified/selected MSMEs and facilitate the fundraising process to selected Financial Institutions.
The Key Responsibilities Include:
Deliverables
Required Skills
How to Apply
For more information and job application details, see; DAI Global Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises Advisor Jobs in Malawi
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