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    Africa's Small Businesses Deserve World Class Banking

    Nicasio
    By Nicasio Karani Migwi
    - April 04, 2026
    - April 04, 2026
    African Wall StreetEntrepreneurshipAnalysisOpinion and Commentary
    Africa's Small Businesses Deserve World Class Banking

    Sub-Saharan Africa faces an estimated US$ 100 billion financing deficit for MSMEs. Closing this gap will require coordinated action from commercial banks, credit unions, mutual banks, microfinance institutions, SACCOs, fintechs and bigtech firms driving embedded finance solutions. Writes Writes Nicasio Karani Migwi, Founder, MD and CEO of Afromaximus Consult and Afromillenium Awards.


    Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) form the backbone of the global economy, yet their growth is constrained by limited access to finance.

    • •According to the March 2025 IFC-World Bank MSME Finance Gap Report, the financing shortfall across 119 Emerging Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs) stands at approximately US$ 5.65 trillion.
    • •This gap represents about 19% of GDP, 20% of total private-sector credit, and 55% of the potential demand for MSME finance, estimated at US$ 10.3 trillion against a supply of just US$ 4.6 trillion. Women-owned MSMEs account for roughly US$ 1.9 trillion, or 34% of the total financing gap.
    • •Informal enterprises- often referred to in Africa as the Jua Kali sector- generate an additional US$ 2.1 trillion in unmet demand for finance, equivalent to about 8 percent of GDP in developing economies.

    Across developing economies, bridging the gap will require financial institutions to fundamentally rethink how they design, deliver and manage banking solutions for small businesses. In Africa, where MSMEs dominate the economic landscape, the development of world-class MSME banking models is no longer optional but essential.

    Globally, MSMEs account for roughly 90% of all businesses, more than 70% of employment, and about half of global GDP. Despite their economic significance, access to finance remains one of the most persistent barriers to their expansion. Around 40% of formal MSMEs are classified as credit-constrained, with 19% fully constrained and 21% partially constrained.

    Sub-Saharan Africa faces an estimated US$ 100 billion financing deficit for MSMEs. Closing this gap will require coordinated action from commercial banks, credit unions, mutual banks, microfinance institutions, SACCOs, fintechs and bigtech firms driving embedded finance solutions. These financial service providers must adopt world-class practices to better serve Africa’s MSME sector through purposeful strategy, robust product offerings, tailored delivery channels and strong risk management frameworks.

    Designing a Purpose-Driven MSME Banking Model

    Financial institutions seeking to succeed in MSME banking must begin with a clear and deliberate business model. This includes comprehensive segmentation of the MSME market using metrics such as asset size, turnover, firm age, employee numbers, gender ownership, formality status, and industry sector.

    Such segmentation enables financial service providers to better understand the distinct needs of each MSME segment. Advanced analytics- including descriptive, predictive and prescriptive data analysis- can help uncover the financial behaviours and unmet needs of small businesses.

    Equally important is the redesign of operating models. These blueprints determine how organisations align their people, processes, technology and organizational structures to deliver strategy effectively. A well-structured operating model ensures that MSME banking initiatives are embedded across the institution rather than treated as peripheral activities.

    Dedicated financial planning and a clear MSME coverage model are also critical. These frameworks define the policies, financial products, digital lending systems, credit guarantee mechanisms and alternative credit scoring methods required to support small businesses and expand financial inclusion. Benchmarking against global peers while developing a distinctive competitive proposition can further strengthen an institution’s position in the MSME banking market.

    Building Strong MSME Products and Services

    World-class MSME banking requires financial institutions to develop clear Customer Value Propositions (CVPs), Unique Selling Points (USPs) and Minimum Viable Products (MVPs) tailored to specific MSME segments.

    While credit products remain important, banks must move beyond an overreliance on lending. Successful institutions build strong deposit mobilisation and transactional banking capabilities alongside credit offerings. A comprehensive relationship-based approach should combine deposits, loans, payments, insurance or bancassurance, investments, trade finance and treasury services under a single integrated framework.

    Advisory services are another essential component. Many MSMEs require financial guidance to strengthen their operations, improve financial management and make informed investment decisions. Providing such support deepens customer relationships while expanding the use of financial products.

    Sector-specific solutions are also necessary. Agricultural MSMEs, for example, benefit from specialised agro-finance products designed around seasonal cash flows and production cycles. Similarly, value-chain financing models can help organize fragmented supply chains, reduce friction in transactions and improve access to finance across entire economic sectors.

    Strengthening Sales and Distribution Channels

    Highly trained and dedicated MSME relationship managers sit at the heart of effective MSME banking strategies. These professionals serve as trusted advisors to entrepreneurs while helping institutions identify cross-selling opportunities.

    Centres of Excellence and specialized business banking centres can support a “one-stop shop” approach, enabling MSMEs to access a full range of financial services within a single platform. Monitoring salesforce productivity and maintaining a balanced focus on both customer acquisition and retention are equally important.

    Beyond traditional bank branches, financial institutions must expand alternative delivery channels. These include corporate internet banking platforms, mobile banking solutions, e-commerce integrations, agency banking networks, merchant payment solutions such as EFTPOS and mobile POS devices, enterprise resource planning (ERP) integrations with core banking systems, open banking APIs and embedded finance models.

    Investing in Talent and Systems

    Developing strong human capital is central to building world-class MSME banking capabilities. Relationship managers and support staff require structured certification programmes and continuous training to deepen their expertise in MSME financing.

    Institutions must also invest in sophisticated technology systems. Loan Origination Systems (LOS) that manage the full credit lifecycle- from application and credit scoring to disbursement, servicing and collections- are essential. Robust Credit Risk Management (CRM) frameworks help maintain portfolio quality while limiting non-performing loans.

    Dedicated data warehousing systems and MSME data marts enable institutions to conduct deeper analytics, monitor portfolio performance and refine credit scoring models. Some institutions also establish Credit Intelligence Units to strengthen risk monitoring and portfolio oversight.

    Managing Credit and Risk Effectively

    Sound credit and risk management remains fundamental to sustainable MSME banking. In addition to traditional financial data, institutions can adopt behavioural and psychometric credit scoring methods to assess borrowers with limited credit histories.

    Credit processes should be streamlined to reduce friction and ensure faster turnaround times for MSME customers. Clear credit delegation frameworks help ensure that customer relationships remain institutional assets rather than individual relationships tied to specific staff members.

    Financial institutions should also implement robust early-warning systems that monitor internal and external indicators of credit risk. These systems enable lenders to detect potential problems early and protect the quality of their loan portfolios.

    Finally, MSME-specific risk rating models aligned with global industry standards can help institutions differentiate borrower quality and implement effective risk-based pricing structures.

    A Strategic Imperative for Africa

    For Africa’s financial sector, strengthening MSME banking capabilities represents both a commercial opportunity and a development imperative. By building purpose-driven business models, expanding product offerings, investing in digital channels and strengthening credit risk management, financial institutions can unlock the enormous potential of the continent’s small business sector.

    Ultimately, Africa’s entrepreneurs deserve financial systems that match their ambition- banking ecosystems capable of supporting innovation, enterprise growth and long-term economic transformation.

    Read More:

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