Transcript Title

ADB’s SME Development
Assistance
Presentation by:
Neil Wallace
Senior Financial Management Specialist
Asian Development Bank
28 October 2009
Small and Medium-sized
Entities and Poverty
Reduction
• Developing Member Countries are at different
stages of transforming their economies from
being essentially rural and agrarian to
becoming urban and industrial
• Countries such as Cambodia and Viet Nam have
become more productive as they have
industrialized
• SMEs are the core of urban industrial activity
• Support for SMEs can help reduce poverty
Institutional Conditions
Required for Structural Change
• Strong physical infrastructure to promote
efficiency in telecommunications, power, roads,
ports, transport, and water supply
• Strong regulatory environment and
transparency and predictability of rules
• Sound contractual frameworks
• Competitive open markets
• Availability of reliable information
• Long-term credit availability
• Effective banking sector
ADB Assistance for Public Policy
• Regional cooperation strategies and programs
• Country Partnership Strategies (CPS)
• Enables the shift of resources to activities with
higher levels of productivity
• Institutional factors and policies that enable
SMEs to expand and grow
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ADB policy reform assistance
program loans are supporting
the development of
SME development program loans
Business registration
Business licensing
Legal and informational underpinnings of finance
Access to resources e.g., finance and land use
rights
• Access to international markets e.g.,
industrial/technical standards
• Banking and financial sector program loans
support the development of credit
ADB Support for Strengthened
Financial Reporting
• Strengthened financial reporting can help
improve SMEs’ access to finance
• ADB programs have included support for
strengthening of financial reporting
• ADB continues to cooperate with and support
IFAC, CAPA, IASB, INTOSAI etc.
For More Information
Neil Wallace,
[email protected]
www.adb.org