Covid-19 loan scheme saved 23 000 jobs, says Ramaphosa
Of the SMMEs approved for support, 67% were black-owned; 30% female-owned and 21% owned by young people.
The government’s R500-million Covid-19 debt relief facility saved 23 000 jobs across various industries, with 67% of the borrowers being black owned, The Citizen reports.
This was revealed by President Cyril Ramaphosa as he addressed a webinar on the role of small to medium enterprises (SMMEs) in the country’s economic recovery.
The Department of Small Business Development banded with the Small Enterprise Finance Agency (SEFA) to make R500-million available to establish the SMME debt relief scheme to help ailing small businesses stay afloat during the pandemic.
“It has been reported that as a result of the funds paid out of this scheme, over 23 000 jobs were saved. That’s a phenomenal number. Of the SMMEs approved for support, 67% were black owned; 30% of them were female owned and 21% of them were owned by young people,” said Ramaphosa, adding he was concerned that only 0.3% were owned by people with disabilities.
The economy relies on the SMME sector to create the greatest number of jobs in SA.
The government’s National Development Plan (NDP) aims to create 11 -million jobs and grow the economy by 5% by 2030.The era of large corporations that create thousands of jobs in one setting was long gone, said Ramaphosa, and the government wants to shift its focus to assist this sector, particularly with its tender system.
The government’s procurement process is open for business to the SMME sector, particularly for businesses led by youths, women and people with disabilities.
“We have specifically set aside targets for designated groups and we do this unashamedly, knowing that this is the best way of being able to help grow our economy but, more importantly, to empower those who in the past were deliberately locked out of playing a meaningful role in the business or economy of our country,” the president said.
Ramaphosa also encouraged businesses to start producing products locally and to look for opportunities to enter newly accessible opportunities on the continent through the African Continental Free Trade Area agreement recently signed by members of the AU.
“It is the SMME sector that can penetrate all those markets. If we don’t do it we are going to find the SMME sector from other countries on the continent are going to trade our market. So let us wake up and be the first market, so that we begin to trade in a most profitable way.
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