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Erkin Jumabaev has increased staff and their salaries at his window and door factory |

Oleg Sibirtsev and his roofing sheets |

Mustafa Sertel's factory manufactures large plastic bottles |
Credit and guarantees smooth cross-border transactions
When a country is not fully integrated into the international financial
system, how do local businesses finance the purchase from abroad of expensive
equipment and material on which their growth depends? Enter the EBRD’s
donor-backed Trade Facilitation Programme. It provides guarantees for
cross-border trade finance transactions and helps small and medium sized
businesses in the region to grow through trade.
Erkin Jumabaev, a window and door manufacturer in Bishkek, Kyrgyz Republic,
credits the EBRD’s Trade Finance Programme (TFP) with helping him to buy
machinery and material from Germany and Turkey. Without it, he could not have
expanded his production, sales, staff and his employees’ salaries.
“Before, I didn’t have enough money to grow,” says Mr Jumabaev whose company
is called Windoors. “All our foreign suppliers wanted us to pre-pay our
equipment orders 100 per cent – I couldn’t do that! This import guarantee
facility has been very useful to us.”
The transaction was conducted through Mr Jumabaev’s local lender, Ineximbank.
It’s one of the many ‘partner’ banks in the region using the TFP to establish
links with international banks. Through the programme the EBRD provides
guarantees to international ‘confirming’ banks, covering the political and
commercial payment risk of international trade finance guarantees issued by
‘issuing’ banks in the EBRD’s countries of operation.
Doubling production
Thanks in part to trade finance, Mr Jumabaev said Windoors’ production has
grown from 2000 square meters of windows and doors four years ago to 3700
square meters today. The staff has increased in that time by 25 per cent to 30
people in total. “I could have increased my staff more. But I decided instead
to increase the pay of my existing staff and they have rewarded me with a big
increase in productivity,” said Mr. Jumabaev.
He’s been a repeat customer of credits backed by the TFP, accessing $42,000 in
April “which I’ve already repaid” on top of $300,000 he had previously
borrowed to buy the Turkish material. “I am expecting to take another $50,000
soon for equipment that will allow me to install locks on the windows and
doors we manufacture.”
Donor support vital
The governments of Germany, Ireland and Switzerland support the TFP in the
Kyrgyz Republic by financing training and consultancy services for local banks
and through risk sharing funds. The €8.6 million Central Asia Risk Sharing
Special Fund (CARSSF) shares EBRD’s TFP risk in the Kyrgyz Republic,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. These efforts help banks to access
international finance, strengthen their trade finance experience, introduce
transparent banking practices and enable staff to gain experience working with
Western confirming banks.
Foreigners want Kyrgyz trade finance
“Trade credit wasn’t available in this country until the EBRD started offering
it,” says Ruslan Boronbaev, Ineximbank’s deputy chairman. “Now we’re getting
clients from other banks, they need this service. In fact we have Chinese,
German and Russian business people operating in Kyrgyz Republic who need these
letters of credit.
“However, Ineximbank’s trade credit business is decreasing, for a very
positive reason,” Mr Boronbaev continues. “Some of our clients have become so
big and have established such good track records that their foreign suppliers
no longer demand pre-payment.”
A different kind of gold
Oleg Sibirtsev, director of a corrugated roofing manufacturing company called
Komet, is one of those Bishkek firms experiencing phenomenal growth but he
still depends on trade finance. Having exhausted his own capital on equipment,
he needed credit to import from Finland the metal sheets his workers transform
into roofing. “The biggest loan was €210,000, always for the metal sheets
which are zinc covered in a polymer.”
Thanks to new equipment and demand for the superior sheeting, “in just two
years we’ve increased our production by six times. Our staff has grown from 16
to 40 in that time. I used to be a geologist – now I have found my gold here!”
says Mr Sibirtsev who plans to start exporting to neighbouring Kazakhstan.
Bottling growth
Across town, turnover at the Turkish-owned plastic bottle manufacturer
Plasform has nearly doubled in one year from $8 million to $15 million,
according to general director Mustafa Sertel. He also uses TFP-backed achieve
the quality demanded by top clients such as Coca-Cola and Pepsi-Cola.
"We’re now at full capacity and need to import new machines from Canada,” says
Mr Sertel. “There is considerable demand for our product – even our
competitors can’t meet all the demand – so we need to grow further. We will
request more credit so we will lease two more machines.” Most of Plaskap’s
production is exported from the Kyrgyz Republic to Kazakhstan.
The trade facilitation programme is an important tool in the EBRD’s new
initiative for Early Transition Countries – its poorest countries of
operation, including Kyrgyz Republic. Under this initiative the TFP will
expand to include more banks, larger loans and more products, such as for the
agribusiness sector.
Between 1999-2003 the TFP guaranteed letters of credit from four Kyrgyz banks,
confirmed by 13 foreign banks in nine countries. More than half the
transactions covered were below €100,000, meaning the programme is reaching
small enterprises that are the engines of economic development.
Contact: Trade Faciltation Programme
29 October 2004
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