Equity inks Sh300m deal to finance small-scale farmers

Equity Bank CEO James Mwangi. FILE PHOTO | NMG

What you need to know:

  • The partnership is a risk-sharing arrangement where the government provides a guarantee fund to cushion the participating financial institutions from any proven loss of the outstanding credit amount in default.
  • The initiative will provide smallholder farmers affordable financial services, boosting commercialisation of farming in a sector plagued by low production, poor marketing, and low financial literacy.
  • Equity chief executive James Mwangi said the total Kilimo Biashara loans disbursed by the end of last year was Sh7.3 billion and benefited 472,632 farmers since 2008.

Equity Bank #ticker:EQTY and the Ministry of Agriculture have signed a Sh300 million agreement to finance farmers under phase two of the Agricultural Credit Guarantee Scheme (ACGS), in which the government provides collateral.

The partnership is a risk-sharing arrangement where the government provides a guarantee fund to cushion the participating financial institutions from any proven loss of the outstanding credit amount in default.

The initiative will provide smallholder farmers affordable financial services, boosting commercialisation of farming in a sector plagued by low production, poor marketing, and low financial literacy.

“This signing ceremony clearly symbolises the strengthening of the public-private partnership between a private organisation and the government. Our partnership with Equity Bank will help accelerate efficient and effective service delivery to low-income beneficiaries in the agriculture sector,” said Agriculture secretary Willy Bett.

He said this programme has helped to bring small-scale farmers into the formal financial system. Under the initiative, Equity will also offer farmers other services such as training, savings/deposits and linkage to crop insurance and markets.

The signing of the second phase of the deal marks the third time the ministry is partnering with the bank. The first agreement was in 2008 through the Kilimo Biashara Partnership and the second one in 2011 through the ACGS first phase agreement.

Equity chief executive James Mwangi said the total Kilimo Biashara loans disbursed by the end of last year was Sh7.3 billion and benefited 472,632 farmers since 2008.

“Kilimo Biashara has been a flagship partnership from which lessons have been used across the continent due to its impact on farming and related businesses,” he said.

“Implementation of Kilimo Biashara partnership also gave us an opportunity to enhance our technology as we realised that farmers required to do their banking closer to their farms so as to save on costs and time.”

Equity Bank is using agency banking and currently has more than 29,000 agents across the country. To support this process, the ministry will provide policy guidance through the Inter-Ministerial Coordination Committee, mobilise and strengthen farmers groups, train players in various value chains and monitor scheme performance.

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