The Small Enterprise Finance Agency (sefa) believes that assisting young entrepreneurs is vital for South Africa’s economy, and will boost efforts to achieve the country’s National Development Plan 2030 goals.
It is important for sefa to empower youth-owned businesses in building an inclusive economy that encourages the participation of the youth, particularly black youth.
As the country observes Youth Month – in which it commemorated the 45th anniversary of the 1976 student uprising in Soweto on Youth Day, 16 June 2021 – sefa would like to highlight the important role young entrepreneurs play in our economy and encourage them, along with other small-business owners, to access funding in order to grow their businesses.
Prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, the Department of Small Business Development and the Small Enterprise Development Agency, along with sefa, had identified the need to stimulate early entrepreneurship development, which resulted in the establishment of programmes such as the Small Business Innovation Fund.
sefa has also entered into various partnerships to assist South African SMMEs, in which youth, women and people with disabilities are the main beneficiaries. Unfortunately, Covid-19 forced sefa to redirect its resources to Covid-19 relief and economic recovery programmes, targeted at reviving mainly township and rural economies. Despite these conditions, in the past financial year sefa managed to fund more than 18 000 youth-owned enterprises to the value of R212-million across different industries.
“We are engaging with youth entrepreneurs throughout Youth Month as a show of our commitment to the youth. We are also working closely with the National Development Agency to improve our offerings, and are using social media to participate in dialogues that allow us to create tailored programmes for start-ups,” says sefa’s CEO, Mxolisi Dalukhanyo Matshamba.
In helping the government to accelerate access to finance, sefa acknowledges the difficulties facing youth-owned small businesses in this regard, and is working with the Department of Small Business Development to make access to finance affordable for small businesses through the implementation of a blended finance model. This model involves the mixing of grants and loans to lower the cost of capital for borrowers – with increased access to funding.
On 22 June 2021 sefa will host a webinar for young entrepreneurs on how to access funding.