Many Zambian agricultural enterprises struggle to access the financing needed to grow their businesses. Many lack business management and technology resources needed to access markets. Removing these limitations to growth for small- and medium-sized agricultural enterprises contributes to stronger and more equitable economic growth. The USAID Enterprise Development and Growth Enhanced project is a five-year, $14.5 million program working to increase profitability for small- and medium-sized enterprises in Zambia’s agriculture sector.
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goal one
Improve the competitiveness of small-and-medium-sized enterprises in the agriculture sector
goal two
Improve agricultural small-and-medium-sized enterprises’ access to finance
goal three
Increase participating agricultural small-and-medium-sized enterprises’ productivity and ability to generate new jobs
KEY RESULTS FOR 2023
Leveraged over $15 million in debt finance since 2021
Facilitated $1.5M in grants for small- and medium-sized enterprises from partners other than USAID
12 financial sector partners (banks, microfinance institutions, investors) and two public funds now offer financing opportunities to investment ready small- and medium-sized enterprises
Assisted over 100 small- and medium-sized enterprises to apply for loans or grants
Over 620 jobs were created
Piloted interest rate reduction with select commercial banks and small- and medium-sized enterprises
$47,757 Kiva loan facilitated for an Eastern Province partner small- and medium-sized enterprise
480 businesses participated in three pre-farming season business-to-business events in Central and Eastern Province and symposia on poultry, aquaculture, and honey
300 small- and medium-sized enterprises assisted by 18 business advisors, technical experts or consultants.
Over 60 interns provided coaching on accounting and records management to small- and medium-sized enterprises
Assisted the National Advisory Board for Impact Investors to develop a guarantee scheme and a credit scoring mechanism that could accommodate 36,000 farmers