Jamaica SME Finance

Almost all formal small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in Jamaica have access to checking or saving accounts, but the financial sector is scarcely used to finance their investments. The lack of funding for the SME sector, or its high cost, has a negative impact on entrepreneurship and business profitability and stability through the business life-cycle, having a particularly negative effect on employment. In addition, the supply of formal nonbank sources of finance is limited, especially for micro-entrepreneurs, with credit unions providing mostly consumer finance and an underdeveloped microfinance sector. The authorities aim to develop a micro-credit act to make it mandatory for multilateral investment funds (MIFs) to register, and to create a regulatory authority to oversee microfinance institution (MFIs). The authorities have taken significant initiatives to enhance the legal and regulatory environment and financial infrastructure, but further efforts are needed. The authorities have also put in place public programs for micro, small, and medium sized enterprise (MSME) finance, however they lack sufficient coordination, and the partial credit guarantee scheme needs to be revamped. It also operates a partial credit guarantee scheme, which is not being utilized by lenders. Thus, its design should be reviewed and revamped to ensure adequate incentives for lenders to use it and its sustainability.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: World Bank, International Monetary Fund
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2015-04
Subjects:EMPLOYMENT, ENTREPRENEURSHIP, FINANCE SECTOR, FINANCIAL STABILITY, LENDER INCENTIVES, MICROFINANCE SECTOR, PROFITABILITY, SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZE ENTERPRISES, SME,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/05/24459218/jamaica-sme-finance-technical-note
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/21909
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spelling dig-okr-10986219092024-08-07T20:27:50Z Jamaica SME Finance Technical Note World Bank International Monetary Fund EMPLOYMENT ENTREPRENEURSHIP FINANCE SECTOR FINANCIAL STABILITY LENDER INCENTIVES MICROFINANCE SECTOR PROFITABILITY SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZE ENTERPRISES SME Almost all formal small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in Jamaica have access to checking or saving accounts, but the financial sector is scarcely used to finance their investments. The lack of funding for the SME sector, or its high cost, has a negative impact on entrepreneurship and business profitability and stability through the business life-cycle, having a particularly negative effect on employment. In addition, the supply of formal nonbank sources of finance is limited, especially for micro-entrepreneurs, with credit unions providing mostly consumer finance and an underdeveloped microfinance sector. The authorities aim to develop a micro-credit act to make it mandatory for multilateral investment funds (MIFs) to register, and to create a regulatory authority to oversee microfinance institution (MFIs). The authorities have taken significant initiatives to enhance the legal and regulatory environment and financial infrastructure, but further efforts are needed. The authorities have also put in place public programs for micro, small, and medium sized enterprise (MSME) finance, however they lack sufficient coordination, and the partial credit guarantee scheme needs to be revamped. It also operates a partial credit guarantee scheme, which is not being utilized by lenders. Thus, its design should be reviewed and revamped to ensure adequate incentives for lenders to use it and its sustainability. 2015-05-19T19:22:48Z 2015-05-19T19:22:48Z 2015-04 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/05/24459218/jamaica-sme-finance-technical-note https://hdl.handle.net/10986/21909 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
FINANCE SECTOR
FINANCIAL STABILITY
LENDER INCENTIVES
MICROFINANCE SECTOR
PROFITABILITY
SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZE ENTERPRISES
SME
EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
FINANCE SECTOR
FINANCIAL STABILITY
LENDER INCENTIVES
MICROFINANCE SECTOR
PROFITABILITY
SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZE ENTERPRISES
SME
spellingShingle EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
FINANCE SECTOR
FINANCIAL STABILITY
LENDER INCENTIVES
MICROFINANCE SECTOR
PROFITABILITY
SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZE ENTERPRISES
SME
EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
FINANCE SECTOR
FINANCIAL STABILITY
LENDER INCENTIVES
MICROFINANCE SECTOR
PROFITABILITY
SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZE ENTERPRISES
SME
World Bank
International Monetary Fund
Jamaica SME Finance
description Almost all formal small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in Jamaica have access to checking or saving accounts, but the financial sector is scarcely used to finance their investments. The lack of funding for the SME sector, or its high cost, has a negative impact on entrepreneurship and business profitability and stability through the business life-cycle, having a particularly negative effect on employment. In addition, the supply of formal nonbank sources of finance is limited, especially for micro-entrepreneurs, with credit unions providing mostly consumer finance and an underdeveloped microfinance sector. The authorities aim to develop a micro-credit act to make it mandatory for multilateral investment funds (MIFs) to register, and to create a regulatory authority to oversee microfinance institution (MFIs). The authorities have taken significant initiatives to enhance the legal and regulatory environment and financial infrastructure, but further efforts are needed. The authorities have also put in place public programs for micro, small, and medium sized enterprise (MSME) finance, however they lack sufficient coordination, and the partial credit guarantee scheme needs to be revamped. It also operates a partial credit guarantee scheme, which is not being utilized by lenders. Thus, its design should be reviewed and revamped to ensure adequate incentives for lenders to use it and its sustainability.
format Report
topic_facet EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
FINANCE SECTOR
FINANCIAL STABILITY
LENDER INCENTIVES
MICROFINANCE SECTOR
PROFITABILITY
SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZE ENTERPRISES
SME
author World Bank
International Monetary Fund
author_facet World Bank
International Monetary Fund
author_sort World Bank
title Jamaica SME Finance
title_short Jamaica SME Finance
title_full Jamaica SME Finance
title_fullStr Jamaica SME Finance
title_full_unstemmed Jamaica SME Finance
title_sort jamaica sme finance
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2015-04
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/05/24459218/jamaica-sme-finance-technical-note
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/21909
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbank jamaicasmefinance
AT internationalmonetaryfund jamaicasmefinance
AT worldbank technicalnote
AT internationalmonetaryfund technicalnote
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