The Venture Capital Trust Fund will invest US$20million in small and
medium enterprises (SMEs) in different sectors of the economy this year,
building on a portfolio of investments currently valued at close to
US$60million.
The Fund invested US$8 million in 2012, and a total of US$16 million
has been invested in 46 SMEs since its creation in 2004. It is
increasingly a key investor in the local agricultural sector through its
agricultural value-chain financing of cereals and grains, to provide
feedstock for the poultry and brewery industries.
Chief Executive Daniel Duku, speaking to the B&FT after signing a
memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Ghana Institute of Management
and Public Administration (GIMPA) to lay the ground for impact
investing in Ghana, said the Fund will leverage new partnerships to
provide additional support to businesses.
He said the Fund is now turning its attention to impact-investing as
investors are no longer considering just financial returns, but also
having a positive social and environmental impact in areas where they
channel their investments.
The MoU will, therefore, establish a collaborative framework for
promoting impact investing as a means of developing a business community
of social enterprises to tackle the social and environmental challenges
confronting the nation.
“The Trust Fund desires to attract additional private capital to
support businesses while providing innovative and effective solutions to
social and environmental challenges in the country.
“We hope the pioneering steps we are taking today will catalyse a
positive transformation of Ghana’s entrepreneurial ecosystem, where
business owners and managers look beyond financial returns to deliver
solutions that reflect positively on the communities and societies
within which they operate,” he said.
The agreement with GIMPA is expected to culminate in the establishment
of a GIMPA Centre for Impact Investing (GCII), which will receive
seed-funding from the Fund using a grant from the Rockefeller
Foundation.
Mr. Duku said the Fund with support from the Rockefeller Foundation
commissioned a comprehensive study of the impact-investing policy
environment in Ghana. The outcome of the report will serve as a useful
guide for the new centre -- expected to be launched with the full report
by the end of next month.
In a world where Government resources and charitable donations are
insufficient to address the world’s social problems, impact investing --
that is, investments made into companies, organisations, and funds with
the intention to generate measurable social and environmental impacts
alongside a financial return -- offers a new alternative for channelling
large-scale private capital for social benefits.
With increasing numbers of investors rejecting the notion that they
face a binary choice between investing for maximum risk-adjusted returns
or donating for social purposes, the global impact-investment market is
now at a significant turning point as it enters the mainstream.
Impact-investing occurs across asset classes including private equity,
venture capital, debt and fixed income. It is estimated that the impact
investment market holds about US$400billion to US$1trillion in
investment potential over the next 10 years.
“I think Ghana stands to benefit from about US$10billion to
US$20billion of this amount. If you look at the amount of money coming
through impact investment, private equity and venture capital, we expect
this trend to grow.
“It is this potential that informs and motivates the introduction of
impact investing in Ghana as a means to complement Government efforts to
address major social challenges by engaging private capital,” Mr. Duku
said.
Rector of GIMPA Professor Franklyn Kwabena Manu said the time is past
due for academia to step out of the classroom and use its knowledge and
expertise to help in development of the national economy.
“The GIMPA Centre for Impact Investing (GCII) is the beginning of one
of many active channels that will serve as a beam of light to assist the
business community, Government and individuals in identifying projects
that can provide measurable social, as well as financial returns,” he
said.
Source: B&FT
No comments:
Post a Comment