The Nigerian government plans the disbursement of funds to small and medium-scale businesses under its Presidential Palliative Programme targeted at alleviating the impact of fuel subsidy removal.
Dr. Doris Uzoka-Anite, the Minister of Industry, Trade, and Investment, said in a statement on Sunday that the two programmes were the Presidential Palliative Loan Programme and the Presidential Conditional Grant Programme.
The statement stated that “In the Presidential Conditional Grant Programme, the Federal Government will disburse a grant sum of N50,000 to nanobusinesses across the 774 local government areas.
“The Federal Government, through the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade, and Investment and the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria, will collaborate with state and local governments, federal legislators, federal ministers, banks, and other stakeholders.
“Eligible nanobusiness beneficiaries should be willing to provide proof of residential/business address in their local government area and relevant personal and bank account information, including a bank verification number for verification of identity.”
A 2020 study by PWC says obtaining finance, finding customers, and addressing infrastructure deficits are the most pressing problems for SMEs, while local government levies are the most difficult taxes to comply with.
“While MSMEs can access loan facilities up to N1m with a repayment period of three years, manufacturers can access financing for working capital with a repayment period of one year for working capital or five years for the purchase of machinery and equipment,” it stated.
Petrol prices have increased from roughly N185 per litre to about N600 per litre as a result of the deregulation of the downstream oil sector, which has hurt and caused immense misery for many Nigerians and affected SMEs who depend on petrol to fund their businesses amidst Nigeria’s epileptic power situation.