BOA gets $1.1m AfDB grant for staff capacity building
The Bank of Agriculture says it has
secured 1.118 million dollars grant from the African Development Bank
(AfDB) for its capacity building and institutional strengthening
projects.
In a statement made available on
Tuesday in Kaduna, Oluremi Olaoye, the Corporate Communication
Manager of the bank, said the projects would enable the bank to
sufficiently serve the Nigerian rural dwellers’ financial needs.
According to Olaoye, AfDB will to
provide 987,510.30 dollars, or 88.12 per cent of the amount, while
the bank of would provide 130,997.03 dollars or 11.88 per cent as
matching grant.
The grant would be used to finance
programmes that would lead to the expansion of the bank’s target
clientele, which is currently small due to low institutional
capacity.
The grant is being provided through the
AfDB’s Middle Income Countries Technical Assistance Fund (MIC-TAF)
to strengthen the BOA.
“The grant is to support BoA in its
restructuring phase, in order to provide improved financial services
to Nigerian farmers, especially the small, medium and commercial
farmers.
“It will also support BoA in
preparing a strategic transformation into an operationally sound and
commercially viable financial institution.
“The AfDB grant will also enable the
bank to develop appropriate financial products, well suited to meet
the needs of its clients, which include rural farmers and small and
medium agricultural-value-chain actors.
Olaoye said that the project task would
include conducting a diagnostics of BoA in order to propose a
transformation strategy and a new model that will allow it respond to
the farmer’s financing needs.
The project would also conduct a human
resource capacity audit with reference to the mandate of the bank and
provide new organogram of human resource strategy that would meet its
new vision.
The funds would also be used to build
human resource capacity and improve skills and competence in crucial
business areas; notably in credit risk management and agriculture
finance.
It also hoped to use part of the grant
to improve its agriculture data management and develop digital
financial inclusion products, tailored to the needs of farmers and
other clients, especially in rural, under served and under-banked
areas.
Improvement in the technical and
managerial skills of BOA human resource in risk management,
agricultural finance, appraisal and monitoring of loan products as
well as agricultural data management would also be in focus.
“It is expected that at the end of
the project, BOA will be able to take on viable projects efficiently
and become a viable financial institution, thus achieving its
transformation objective of becoming the foremost self-sustaining
Development Finance Institution in Africa,’’ Olaoye said.
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