$400m deal signed between China Development Bank and African Export-Import Bank to help African SMEs

Benedict Oramah, president and chairperson of the board of directors of African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank), addresses the media in Kigali, Rwanda, on June 28, 2017, where experts urged African countries to promote intra-African trade and economic integration to address development challenges in African countries. Picture: Lyu Tianran Xinhua (zxj)

Benedict Oramah, president and chairperson of the board of directors of African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank), addresses the media in Kigali, Rwanda, on June 28, 2017, where experts urged African countries to promote intra-African trade and economic integration to address development challenges in African countries. Picture: Lyu Tianran Xinhua (zxj)

Published Aug 29, 2023

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Johannesburg - A multimillion-dollar development-focused agreement has been signed in Cairo, Egypt, between the China Development Bank and the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) to provide Afreximbank with a $400-million term loan facility to support the financing of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) across Africa.

The agreement, signed by Tan Jiong, president of the CDB, and Professor Benedict Oramah, president and chairperson of the board of directors of Afreximbank, at the Afreximbank headquarters in Cairo, provides for Afreximbank to deploy the facility to support African SMEs involved in extra- and intra-African trade and those engaged in the productive sectors in Afreximbank member states.

According to the agreement, the facility, which has a seven-year tenor, will be deployed either directly to eligible African SMEs that meet Afreximbank’s requirements or indirectly through local financial intermediaries.

Oramah said that African SMEs continue to struggle to access adequate and affordable financing for growing their businesses and that the CDB facility would help increase the level of financing available to them.

“This facility further strengthens the strategic partnership we have developed with the China Development Bank over the last six years, which has seen CDB make three previous interventions in support of our work at Afreximbank,” said Oramah.

Oramah said that since Afreximbank was receiving the facility as medium- to long-term funding at relatively affordable pricing, the bank would transfer the financial advantage in pricing and tenor to the end beneficiaries.

“It will also enable our two institutions to achieve our respective mandates and developmental outcomes, which include job creation, increased economic activity, and increased extra-African trade with China.”

The Star

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