Mkurugenzi Mkuu wa CRDB Bank Dr. Charles Kimei akiongea machache kuishukuru International Finance Corporation (IFC) kwa kufikia makubaliano ya kuipatia CRDB Bank $ milioni 75 kwa ajili ya mikopo ya akina mama wakulima na wafanyabiashara wa Tanzania kwa ajili ya kuwawezesha kuongeza kipato chao kwa kuzingatiwa kwamba ni asilimia 15 tu ya akina mama wanaokidhi masharti ya mikopo inayotolewa na benki za Tanzania.
Mwenyekiti wa Bodi ya Wakurugenzi ya CRDB Bwn. Martin Mmari akitoa shukurani zake kwa IFC
Waziri wa Fedha Mhe. Saada Mkuya Salum akiongea na kuwashukuru ICF kwa kutambua wakina mama wa Tanzania kwa mchango wao mkubwa wakuleta maendeleo ya Tanzania.
Bwn. Jean philippe Prosper (Vise President for Sub Saharan African, Latin American and The Caribbean, IFC) akiongea na kushukuru kufikia makubaliano Dola milioni 75 kwa CRDB Bank.
Mkurugeni wa CRDB Dr. Charles Kimei akiongea.
Mkurugenzi Mkuu wa CRDB Dr. Charles Kimei na Bwn. Jean philippe Prosper (Vise President for Sub Saharan African, Latin American and The Caribbean, IFC) wakitiliana saini makubaliano ya dola milioni 75 kwa ajili ya kusaidia mkopo ya akina mama wakulima na wafanyabiashara wa Tanzania mikopo itakayopitia CRDB Bank. Mashahidi ni Mwenyekiti wa Bodi ya Wakurugenzi ya CRBD Bwn. Martin Mmari (kushoto) na Bi. Kruskania Sierra Escalante
Mkurugenzi Mkuu wa CRDB Dr. Charles Kimei na Bwn. Jean philippe Prosper (Vise President for Sub Saharan African, Latin American and The Caribbean, IFC) wakibadilishana makubaliyano baada ya kutia saini.
Picha ya pamoja.
Waziri wa Fedha Tanzania Mhe. Saada Mkuya Salum na Mkurugenzi Mkuu wa CRDB Dr. Charles Kimei wakiongea na waandishi wa habari (hawapo pichani) baada ya kutiliana saini na kukabidhiana makubalino kati ya IFC na CRDB kukamilika. wengine toka kushoto ni Saugata Bandyopadhyay (Operations and Customer Services) CRDB Bank na Mwenyekiti wa Bodi ya Wakurugenzi ya CRDB Bwn. Martin Mmari
Waziri wa Fedha Tanzani Mhe. Saada Mkuya Salum akibadilishana mawili matatu na Bi. Georgina Baker (Global Head Trade & Supply Chain Solutions) wa IFC
kwa picha zaidi bofya soma zaidi
Mkurugenzi Mkuu wa CRDB Bank Dr. Charles Kimei katika picha na Bi. Georgina Baker (Global Head Trade & Supply Chain Solutions) wa IFC
Duputy Governor Economic & Financial Policies Dkt. Natu El- maamry Mwamba akishuhudia kutiliana saini makabalino ya dola milioni 75 kati ya IFC na CRDB kushoto ni Baraka Munisi.
IFC
and CRDB Bank commit to support SME and agribusiness sectors in Tanzania
Washington, DC, April
11, 2014—IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, today
signed a landmark $75 million agreement with CRDB Bank that will help provide
much needed support to small businesses, particularly those owned by women, as
well as to farmers and agribusiness in Tanzania.
In Tanzania, there is a significant financing gap
for SMEs, and women-owned businesses are particularly disadvantaged with only
15% reporting having access to a bank loan.
Access to finance is critical to helping them to grow their businesses
and contribute to economic development. IFC and CRDB Bank will partner to focus
on underserved SME and retail market segments as well as agribusiness producers
and exporters.
Jean Philippe Prosper, IFC Vice President for
Sub-Saharan Africa, said: “IFC is committed to partner with CRDB Bank to reach
out to underserved communities in Tanzania. This is the beginning of IFC’s
collaboration with CRDB Bank and we hope to work more closely to support
economic development and promote job creation in the country.”
“Working with IFC, we intend to strengthen our reach
to SMEs and further promote agri commodity export. As a market leader in
Tanzania, we have a mandate to support these market segments and are grateful
to launch the collaboration with IFC,” said Dr. Charles Stephen Kimei, Managing
Director of CRDB Bank Group.
The investment will promote financing for women-owned
businesses, as well for farmers, capitalizing on CRDB Bank’s position as a
leader in financial inclusion in Tanzania. IFC also plans to provide advisory
services in the field of trade and warehouse financing to strengthen CRDB’s
operations.
The signing ceremony took place in Washington DC during
the World Bank-IMF Spring Meeting and was observed by the Finance Minister Hon.
Saada Mkuya Salum, Tanzanian Ambassador to the USA Liberata Mulamula, and the Bank
of Tanzania Governor Prof. Benno Ndulu.
The comprehensive investment package consists of a $40
million loan targeting SMEs, particularly those owned by women, including $6
million through IFC’s Global SME Finance Facility; a $10 million trade line
through IFC’s Global Trade Finance Program and $25 million through IFC’s Global
Warehouse Finance Program to support the agricultural commodity business,
including $10 million from the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program’s
(GAFSP) private sector window.
About IFC
IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, is the largest global
development institution focused exclusively on the private sector. Working with
private enterprises in more than 100 countries, we use our capital, expertise,
and influence to help eliminate extreme poverty and promote shared prosperity.
In FY13, our investments climbed to an all-time high of nearly $25 billion,
leveraging the power of the private sector to create jobs and tackle the
world’s most pressing development challenges. For more information, visit
www.ifc.org
Stay Connected
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About CRDB Bank
CRDB Bank is the
largest commercial bank in Tanzania (market share: 18% by asset size, 20% by
deposits). It is listed on the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange. It has regional
ambitions, having recently opened a subsidiary in Burundi which will focus on
bottom of pyramid, microfinance segment. CRDB Bank is
currently owned by over 35,000 shareholders, one of the fastest growing banks
in the country, with a 20% share in the market for deposits, it operates in
every region in the country with a network of 103 branches, 311 ATMs, 15 Mobile
branches, 1,162 Point of Sales (POS) terminals, 491 agents, and 441
microfinance partners, including a focus on microfinance and helping Tanzanian
SMEs.
IFC Global Warehouse Finance Program
IFC’s Global
Warehouse Finance Program (“GWFP”), created in 2010, aims to increase working
capital financing to farmers and agricultural players by leveraging their
production. The program supports the agriculture sector by providing banks with
liquidity or risk coverage backed by warehouse receipts or other inventory
financing schemes, which are used to provide financing in the form of short
term loans to producers and traders ahead of export. To date, IFC has financed
US$4.6 billion commodity finance transactions in more than 20 countries. The
program is expected to reach up to 241,000 farmers across emerging markets in
all regions and contribute to food availability for 15 million people by 2016.
Global Agriculture and Food Security
Program (GAFSP)
The (GAFSP) is a
multilateral mechanism to assist in the implementation of pledges made by the
global community to support country-led investment plans. GAFSP Private Sector Window (PSW) plays a
catalytic role by supporting private sector investment projects and promoting
sustainable agriculture in developing countries. GAFSP aims to improve the
livelihoods of SMEs and small hold farmers through sustainable solutions to
improve access to finance and reduce risks in agriculture. GAFSP is funded by
five donors including the Netherlands, Canada, Japan, United Kingdom through
DFID, and the United States.
Global SME Finance Facility
Responding to a
call from the G-20 to bridge the trillion dollar financing gap faced by SMEs,
IFC developed the Global SME Finance Facility in partnership with international
financial institutions, commercial banks and donors, with the United Kingdom’s
Department for International Development.
The purpose of the Facility is to help banks and non-bank FIs in
developing countries expand their services to underserved SME segments. Through
a combination of investment and advisory services, the Facility aims to support
and accelerate the trends that are driving growth in the SME markets, with a
particular focus on SMEs in fragile and conflict-affected situations and on
women-owned SMEs.
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