Root Capital, The MasterCard Foundation to Raise Income for 300,000 Farmers in West Africa

Impact investing pioneer, Root Capital announced at the African Green Revolution Forum a new partnership with The MasterCard Foundation that will help raise incomes for over 300,000 smallholder farmers in West Africa.

The Foundation has committed $5.2 million to Root Capital over five years to support early-stage agricultural businesses that generate transformational impact in rural communities in Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, and Senegal.
“With Root Capital we will help to bring much-needed financing and capacity building to businesses in West Africa that work with farmers otherwise excluded from the formal economy,” said Ann Miles, Director of Financial Inclusion and Youth Livelihoods at The MasterCard Foundation. “We see this as a good avenue to help increase incomes and opportunities for 4,000 employees of agricultural businesses, 300,000 smallholder farmers, and over two million farm family members.”
Without access to predictable markets for their crops, small-scale rural farmers are often forced to accept lower prices for their crops and find themselves trapped in a cycle of poverty. While the global credit supply for smallholders has grown in recent years, it is geographically skewed with less than 10 percent of financial flows reaching sub-Saharan Africa.
Over the seven years that Root Capital has worked in West Africa, it has provided loans of between $50,000 and $2 million to 52 agricultural businesses that have raised incomes for nearly 12,000 employees and over 190,000 smallholder farmers.

Root Capital has also scaled its advisory program in the region, offering agricultural business leaders a suite of training modules to develop the leadership and financial management skills they need to grow and sustain their businesses.
“With the support of The MasterCard Foundation, Root Capital will be able to increasingly target earlier-stage businesses in West Africa that operate on the fringes of financial inclusion – businesses that demonstrate potential to grow and generate increased impact,” said Diaka Sall, Root Capital’s General Manager for West Africa.
Specifically, Root Capital will collaborate with The MasterCard Foundation to:

  • Accelerate the bankability and growth of more than 100 high-impact, early-stage agricultural businesses with capital needs under $150,000 and/or business revenues under $300,000;
  • Pilot an expanded set of advisory services, including leadership development of agribusiness employees; financial literacy training for smallholder farmers; mobile technology and mobile money; and empowering local microfinance institutions to better serve the agricultural sector; and
  • Contribute to sector learning by developing a framework for documenting and analysing the costs and impacts associated with early business growth in the agricultural sector.

This initiative will help address the urgent need of early-stage West African agribusinesses for capital and capacity building. With an estimated 48 million small-holder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa, however, who remain disconnected from such businesses and the stable sources of income they offer, a great deal of work remains to be done.

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Stanbic IBTC Pension Managers Champions Flexible Pension Solutions to Deepen Inclusion

Stanbic IBTC Pension Managers, a subsidiary of Stanbic IBTC...

Train 7 Hits 90% Completion, Generates 16,000 Jobs as NCDMB, NLNG Advance Local Content

The leadership of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring...

NCDMB to Launch Oil and Gas Trainers Certification

The Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) is...

World Yeye Adesola Odeyeyiwa Day: Celebrating a Woman of Great Industry and Elegance

      By Goke Ilesanmi It is another WORLD YEYE ADESOLA ODEYEYIWA...

Topics

Stanbic IBTC Trustees: ‘Educating Every Nigerian Child Our Priority’

Stanbic IBTC Trustees Limited, through the Stanbic IBTC Education...

Stanbic IBTC Asset Management Bags Top Asset Management Award 2026 by Global Banking & Finance Review

In a noteworthy achievement in Nigeria's asset management landscape,...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Partners FRSC on Road Safety Campaign

L-R: Segun Bankole, Deputy General Manager, Corporate Communications &...

IDC to Host ‘Digital Retail Summit 2017’ in Turkey

International Data Corporation (IDC) is pleased to announce the...

BUHARINOMICS: Charting Path to Sustainable Economic Renaissance

The presidential election was over on Saturday, March 28, 2015. It is now a historical document for academic research and street political analysis. On March 28, CHANGE triumphed over TRANSFORMATION AGENDA, leading to the emergence of General Muhammadu Buhari as President, Federal Republic of Nigeria. On May 29, Buhari assumed the leadership of the nation, bringing to an end, the regime of Goodluck Jonathan. For Buhari, it is a long road to Aso Rock. Three times he contested and lost. And three times he dusted the stinking ashes of defeat to rise again to seek for the same office. And on the fourth effort, he won. Either fortune smiled on him or the Gods took pity on him and handed him the office to break the cycle of defeat and save him from the poisoned pen of harsh historians and political propagandists.

Verve Rewards Cardholders with Brand New Car, Prizes Worth N50m

L-R - Chuma Ezirim, FirstBank’s Group Executive, E-Business and...

Access Pensions Surpasses N1tn AUM Milestone

Access Pensions Limited, a subsidiary of Access Corporation, has...

Cryptocurrency Theft Hits $927m in 9 Months

A report by Reuters says the theft of cryptocurrencies...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img