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Asian entrepreneurs benefit from EBRD support. |
Two years ago, the EBRD took stock of the situation in its seven poorest
countries of operations: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kyrgyz Republic,
Moldova, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.
“The picture was, to put it mildly, grim. They were stagnating amid poor
conditions,” remembered EBRD Vice-President Fabrizio Saccomani as he began to
outline progress since then under the EBRD programme to support economic
development in those seven Early Transition Countries (ETCs).
Speaking to donors and others attending an ETC workshop as part of the EBRD’s
Annual Meeting underway in London this weekend, Mr Saccomani and other senior
Bank staff itemised gains achieved since the ETC Initiative was launched in
2004.
First, donor funding has more than doubled to reach €18 million in 2005, in
particular via the ETC Multidonor Fund which pools grants from Canada,
Finland, Ireland, Japan, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland, Taiwan and the UK.
That donor funding has acted as a catalyst in boosting EBRD investment which
has almost quadrupled from €53 million in 2003 to €250 million in 2005.
Financing entrepreneurs
Chikako Kuno, Director of the EBRD’s Group for Small Business, charted her
team’s efforts to fund small entrepreneurs in the ETCs. “Going into former
state-led economies, there was a dearth of financing and entrepreneurship,”
she commented. “Many people were forced to become entrepreneurs and have been
financed through family members, through retained earnings or loan sharks.”
The Group for Small Business provides credit and training to local financial
institutions and a growing number of non-traditional, grassroots lenders such
as charities/non-governmental organisations. These then ‘on-lend’ the EBRD’s
capital and, as they witness the profits to be made from lending to poor
entrepreneurs, they start lending their own capital as well. In the ETCs the
Group for Small Business has financed 20,000 new businesses via 282,000 loans
totalling €744 million, with an average loan size of $2630.
“Our partner banks have lower default rates than other banks, thanks in great
part to the training provided by donors,” said Ms Kuno.
She cited the example of Georgia coffee shop owner Nargiza Kurtanidze who
initially borrowed $59 from EBRD partner bank ProCredit to buy coffee beans to
build her business shortly after Georgia’s ruinous civil war drew to an end.
“ProCredit Bank was the first bank where I stepped in after the civil war,” Ms
Kuno quoted Mrs Kurtanidze as saying. “To tell you the truth, I was a bit
scared that they would tell me this bank was not suitable for me. But what I
found there was a warm atmosphere with young professional staff who helped me
make the best coffee shop in my district!”
Quantifying impact
EBRD Chief Economist Erik Berglof said that his department is increasingly
looking at ways to quantify the impact the Bank has on people’s lives. “We
cannot ignore the broader context. Whose lives are we really affecting? It’s
important for our institution to show concrete results.” He said the Bank’s
projects should increasingly be designed in ways that will facilitate that
analysis. As an example he cited a study of the EBRD’s small business lending
programme which turned up evidence that Bank-backed businesses are more
profitable and create more jobs than do other firms.
EBRD’s investments in municipal and environmental infrastructure (MEI), from
buses to water services to city-wide residential heating systems, have direct
impact on quality of life, asserted MEI Deputy Director Henry Russell.
Between projects currently under consideration and those already approved for
financing, Mr Rusell said, the MEI portfolio affects a population of about two
million people in 17 municipalities across the early transition zone.
Unfortunately, given the poverty both of the utility companies and their
clients, many infrastructure projects require large-scale grants or cheap
loans from donors. The Bank estimates it needs $35 million to fund its
proposed new MEI projects in the ETCs.
Everyday people benefit
Building on Mr Berglof’s comments, Mr Russell pointed out the direct impacts
to be achieved through three projects in Georgia.
Investment in the bus system in Tbilisi will yield safer, more reliable
service for 378,000 people and a reduction in fuel use and greenhouse gas and
other pollutants. The Kutaisi water project will benefit 191,000 by bringing
cleaner water, reducing water-borne illness, cutting energy costs by one-third
and decreasing pollutants discharged into the Black Sea. The Adjara solid
waste project benefits 143,000 by reducing uncontrolled dumping, creating an
EU-standard landfill and recycling facility.
Written by EBRD Senior Writer Kate Dunn.
21 May 2006
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