The Bank of Kigali has committed to provide Sh17.9 billion worth of loans to farmers and businesses across the agricultural value chain.
A portion of the funding will be provided at a concessionary interest rate of as low as 8Percent per annum, which is less than half of the average lending cost of between 16Percent and 18Percent.
The Bank of Kigali CEO, Dr Diane Karusisi, said the funds, to be disbursed over the next five years, are intended to accelerate ongoing transformation from subsistence to commercial farming in Rwanda and across East Africa.
BK Group is listed on both the Rwanda Stock Exchange and the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE).
“The agriculture sector is heavily underfunded yet it comprises the biggest portion of our GDP. This fund is expected to scale up commercialization of farming by providing affordable loans to farmers and agribusinesses,” said Dr Karusisi.
Banking data in Rwanda shows the agriculture sector accounts for only about 7Percent of the industry loan book, yet it comprises 30Percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
Absence of reliable financial data has been a major hindrance to the flow of funding to the agricultural sector, as banks lack tools to assess farmers’ creditworthiness.
De Risking Agriculture
The Bank of Kigali CEO however says this is now gradually changing, as agricultural value chains such as tea, coffee, maize, rice and dairy become more mature.
Under the Commercialization and De-risking for Agricultural Transformation (CDAT) project, borrowers will get loans at an interest rate of 8Percent for 90Percent of the loan applied while the remaining 10Percent will be advanced at commercial rates.
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The second tier, Economic Recovery Fund II(ERFII), will see farmers and agro-processors get 60Percent of their loans application at 8Percent and the remaining 40Percent at market rates.
“There is an option to access full funding at 8Percent per annum depending on the value chain and the size of the agribusiness,” said Dr Karusisi.
Bank of Kigali reported a 15.1Percent growth in net profit to KSh7.1 billion for the year ended December 2022.
The profit increase was mainly driven by a 14.5Percent growth in the loan book to KSh135 billion.
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