Facebook India on Friday launched 'Small Business Loans Initiative' to help small and medium businesses (SMBs) in India.
India is the first country for Facebook where this programme is getting rolled out.
Facebook India on Friday launched 'Small Business Loans Initiative' to help small and medium businesses (SMBs) in India.
India is the first country for Facebook where this programme is getting rolled out.
It will help small and medium businesses (SMBs) that advertise on Facebook’s platform to get quick access to credit through independent lending partners.
The programme is open to businesses registered across 200 towns and cities of India.
The goal of the initiative is to make business loans more easily accessible to small entrepreneurs, and reduce the credit gap within India's MSME (micro, small and medium enterprises) sector, Facebook India Vice-President and MD Ajit Mohan told reporters in a virtual briefing.
"It's going to be an arm's length relationship with reputable and reliable lenders, but within the construct of a programme that has been co-designed with Facebook... Indifi is the first lending partner and the idea is that as we scale, others can follow," he added.
He emphasised that there is no revenue share for Facebook in the programme, and that SMEs will have no obligation to spend the loan proceeds on Facebook.
Mohan also noted that all decisions related to the loans – including approval, disbursement and recovery – will be made by Indifi (and other lending partners as they join).
He added that Facebook is providing the connection between the lender partner and the SME and adding structure in terms of interest rates.
Mohan said about 200 million businesses use Facebook apps every month across Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp and a significant share of that is in India.
Through Facebook's partnership with Indifi, small businesses that advertise with Facebook can get loans between Rs 5 lakh and Rs 50 lakh at a predefined interest rate of 17-20 per cent per annum and applicants will not be charged a processing fee by Indifi.
Indifi will also disburse the loan amount within five working days of the borrower completing all documentation formalities after acceptance of the offer by Indifi.
Small businesses that are wholly or partly women-owned can get a special 0.2 per cent reduction per annum on the applied loan interest rate from Indifi.
"Access to credit continues to be one of the big important factors driving and impacting the growth of MSMEs. Independent research shows that Indian MSMEs face huge challenges in securing timely financing and that curtails the growth opportunities," he said.
According to the 'Future of Business' survey conducted by Facebook in collaboration with OECD and the World Bank last year, almost a third of operational SMEs on Facebook in 2020 said they expected cash flow to be one of their primary challenges.
Getting access to timely credit is particularly challenging for micro and small businesses that have just started out and might not have a long credit history.
Mohan said the private sector can play a pivotal role in enabling innovative and credible models that offer seamless and timely access to funding for the MSMEs in the country.
FICCI President Uday Shankar said the industry body has always advocated stronger private sector participation for the growth of India's MSMEs and welcomes the launch of Facebook's Small Business Loans Initiative to make access to credit more easily available to the industry.
"We look forward to collaborating with Facebook over the coming months to develop programs and solutions that can provide an impetus to the sector,” he added.
In the last one year, Facebook has taken numerous steps to support the economic recovery of small businesses. Some of these include offering grants to small businesses, and expanding the company's industry-leading skilling initiatives to support the offline to online journeys of small businesses. With the Small Business Loans Initiative, Facebook hopes to further catalyse the growth of micro, small, and medium enterprises in India.
As part of its USD 100-million global grant, Facebook deployed more than USD 4 million in India for more than 3,000 small businesses across the five cities that it operates in.
Niti Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant, in a video message, said one of the most critical aspects for India's integration into the global value chains is by making industries more globally competitive.
"COVID-19 has given industries the opportunity to roll out industry-wide technology transformation programmes. This is key to being able to compete at a global stage.
"The government is committed to creating an enabling environment for MSMEs in the private sector to thrive, the private sector also will have to work together to help the various MSMEs across the value chain, adapt to the latest technologies and new business processes," he added.
(PTI inputs)