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Agricultural Finance Market Scoping Tanzania 2011. Sample & methodology. Sample drawn by National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) D ata collected by Synovate Tanzania Listing & screening exercise provided the sampling frame
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Sample & methodology • Sample drawn by National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) • Data collected by Synovate Tanzania • Listing & screening exercise provided the sampling frame • Identified2 015 742 agri-businesses of which 519 972 qualified • 4 094 face-to-face interviews were conducted with agri-business owners • 3 734 interviews with producers • 104 interviews with processors • 256 interviews with service providers • The survey is representative at: • National, urban-rural, and agricultural zonal levels • (including Zanzibar) for producers • National level for processors and service provide
Land-size and income-based selection criteria applied $600 or 5 acres of land for producers $1,500 for non-producers ?
The problem … • Smallholder & agri-business finance perceived as risky • There is lack of financial services suited for agriculture • Limited penetration of financial services
Business owners demonstrate entrepreneurial characteristics …
Business owners manage their money wisely and are willing to take calculated risks
AgFiMS Tanzania 2011 Business EnvironmentIs the environment conducive for these entrepreneurs to achieve business success?
‘Ownership’ of land is a perception for most producers More than 90% producers claim land ownership although less than 10% have title deeds
Level of access to infrastructure not conducive for business activities, butmobile phones provide connectivity
Limitations in the business environment results in distressed sales Preferred Market? Distressed sales? 12% sell on contract 10% sell all products on contract
Agri-businesses have virtually no coping mechanisms to rely on when faced with business risks
Income diversification offering protection?86.1% diversify their income sources
Lack of access to networks &information increases vulnerability
Sound financial decision-making does not result in high levels of financial inclusion for agri-businesses
Quantifying the amount of credit in the AgFiMS market Banks SACCOs MFIs Informal Friends/ family • ASSUMPTIONS • Once-off per source • Ts 3,1m Bank • Ts300k SACCO/MFI • Ts100k Informal • Ts50k Friends/fam 4% business owners 7% business owners 27% business owners 14% business owners USD 36m 68.9% of credit 11.7% of borrowers USD 6m 12.2% of credit 21.3% of borrowers USD 8m 15.1% of credit 79.3% of borrowers USD 2m 3.8% of credit 40.2% of borrowers • USD 300 on average • 20% of turnover of those who borrow USD 52m
The role of the informal sector - Credit? 96% of all business owners who use informal mechanisms use it for the purpose of credit
AgFiMS identified capacities needed for formal financial services usage • Access to infrastructure • Access to markets • Access to/usage of credible financial advisory resources • Access to/usage of credible business advisory resources • Access to/exposure to appropriate agricultural advice/support • Social capital – Access to networks & support structures; coping mechanisms
The Future of AgFIMS? Tanzania - first country where AgFiMS was undertaken The aim is that it will be adopted for other countries across Africa
More information:www.agfims.org Financial Sector Deepening Trust (FSDT) Mwallu Mwachan’ga E: mwallu@fsdt.or.tz E: info@fsdt.or.tz T: +255 22 260 2873/5/6 Gatsby Charitable Foundation (GCF) Ian Anderson E: ian.anderson@gatsby.org.uk T: 44 20 7410 0330