The Network of Associations of Registered NGOs in Ghana (NARNGO), has called on government to give priority to Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) with a focus on creating jobs in the disbursement of its stimulus package.
It also appealed to government to consider development-oriented NGOs and religious bodies that were social service inclined in the disbursement process to help provide relief for the needy and vulnerable in the society.
A statement issued by the group and signed by Mr Kofi Lucas, the Founding Father and President of Network of Associations of Registered NGOs in Ghana (NARNGO), and copied to the Ghana News Agency, said with no upper limits and or minimum amounts set with regards to loan sizes, the need, circumstance and repayment capacity would determine the size of loan awarded to beneficiaries.
It said it is therefore imperative that jobs creation, social interventions and the capacity to pay back the loan are prioritised.
“The most important thing government must look out for is any concept that can create jobs, have social interventions and pay back the loan.
“We are of the view that two groups be considered: SMEs that are profit oriented on one hand and development NGOs and religious bodies that are not profit oriented but rather social services inclined on the other hand,” the statement said.
Government, in April, announced a GH¢600 million stimulus package targeted at SMEs to cushion them from the effects caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
In addition, it announced that it was mobilising partners in the banking sector to support the fund with a supplementary GH¢400 million, bringing the total to GH¢1billion.
The facility is to be managed by the National Board for Small Scale Industries (NBSSI), with KPMG as its technical partner.
Beneficiaries of the facility are expected to pay an interest of three per cent, with a one year moratorium before repayments are made over a subsequent two years.
Touching on strategic corporate business plan, the statement said, corporative business groups should be made to have a business plan that encompassed all its members, adding that the recent lockdown as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic exposed social weaknesses and the challenges of the entire world, particularly Ghana.
The Association said, as part of the disbursement plan, corporate business groups and SMEs should be made to have social intervention plan such as providing at least one nutritious healthy meal per day to at least 50 to 200 needy senior citizens and vulnerable groups per electoral area of operation, as their corporate social responsibility.
“We saw how people were struggling for cooked and dried food stuffs all over the world including Ghana. Hunger, poor eating habits, weak immune system due to bad healthy lifestyle practice just to mention a few can be attributed to the death of people who have contracted COVID-19 pandemic globally including Ghana,” it stated.
The Association commended the President and for that matter the Government for initiating the relief package.