Factoring as tool of financial inclusion in Kenya

Magister Legum - LLM === A popular difficulty that all SMEs have had to face is limited access to finance. The fact that banks are not prepared to finance small businesses, has exacerbated the existing 'financing gap' in the small and medium-sized business which is already present in the S...

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Main Author: Mosongo, Fiona
Other Authors: Wandrag, R.
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/7916
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-79162021-03-04T05:11:24Z Factoring as tool of financial inclusion in Kenya Mosongo, Fiona Wandrag, R. Kenya Trade facilitation Economic development Trade finance: Financial regulation Magister Legum - LLM A popular difficulty that all SMEs have had to face is limited access to finance. The fact that banks are not prepared to finance small businesses, has exacerbated the existing 'financing gap' in the small and medium-sized business which is already present in the SME industry. In an analysis of small and medium business are faced with a myriad of difficulties often as a result of restrictions in current collateral systems that do not offer a viable degree of risk mitigation due to ineffectual legislation, insufficient enforcement procedures, or an existing legal structure.1 All of these have therefore made factoring a great choice as far as SMEs go in all African countries that want to have access to financial services. Factoring is the service that, in order to provide the underlying credit sales of goods or services (known as a factor), is provided by a third-party. 2021-03-01T13:52:48Z 2021-03-01T13:52:48Z 2021 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/7916 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Kenya
Trade facilitation
Economic development
Trade finance:
Financial regulation
spellingShingle Kenya
Trade facilitation
Economic development
Trade finance:
Financial regulation
Mosongo, Fiona
Factoring as tool of financial inclusion in Kenya
description Magister Legum - LLM === A popular difficulty that all SMEs have had to face is limited access to finance. The fact that banks are not prepared to finance small businesses, has exacerbated the existing 'financing gap' in the small and medium-sized business which is already present in the SME industry. In an analysis of small and medium business are faced with a myriad of difficulties often as a result of restrictions in current collateral systems that do not offer a viable degree of risk mitigation due to ineffectual legislation, insufficient enforcement procedures, or an existing legal structure.1 All of these have therefore made factoring a great choice as far as SMEs go in all African countries that want to have access to financial services. Factoring is the service that, in order to provide the underlying credit sales of goods or services (known as a factor), is provided by a third-party.
author2 Wandrag, R.
author_facet Wandrag, R.
Mosongo, Fiona
author Mosongo, Fiona
author_sort Mosongo, Fiona
title Factoring as tool of financial inclusion in Kenya
title_short Factoring as tool of financial inclusion in Kenya
title_full Factoring as tool of financial inclusion in Kenya
title_fullStr Factoring as tool of financial inclusion in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Factoring as tool of financial inclusion in Kenya
title_sort factoring as tool of financial inclusion in kenya
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/7916
work_keys_str_mv AT mosongofiona factoringastooloffinancialinclusioninkenya
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