Coca-Cola, IFC vote $100m to empower women, Nigeria gets $22m
Coca-Cola Nigeria, as part of a
landmark $100 million agreement signed on Monday between the Coca-Cola
Company and the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the
World Bank Group, will provide financing to women micro-distributors in
the company’s value chain.
The agreement, signed in Atlanta, USA,
between both global giants, provides for a three-year joint initiative
to provide access to finance for women entrepreneurs in developing
markets across Eurasia and Africa. Nigeria has been allocated $22
million (about N3.5 billion) from this grant. In Nigeria, Coca-Cola and
IFC are working with Access Bank to provide financing to women
micro-distributors (MDCs), in close collaboration with Coca-Cola’s
bottling partner, the Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC).
The collaboration builds on the
synergies between Coca-Cola’s 5by20 Women’s Economic Empowerment
Initiative and IFC’s Banking on Women Program to help address barriers
women entrepreneurs commonly face in some of the world’s poorest
countries. IFC will work through its network of local and regional
banking institutions to provide financing and business skills training
to small and medium sized businesses that are owned or operated by women
entrepreneurs across the Coca-Cola value chain.
Speaking on the empowerment initiative
in Nigeria, Clem Ugorji, Public Affairs and Communications Manager,
Coca-Cola Nigeria, said: “Work related to this initiative is already
beginning in Nigeria. Coca-Cola and IFC are working with Access Bank to
provide up to $22 million financing to women micro-distributors (MDCs)
in the Coca-Cola value chain, in close collaboration with Coca-Cola’s
bottling partner, Nigerian Bottling Company.”
In his own reaction to the development,
Nathan Kalumbu, President of Eurasia and Africa Group, The Coca-Cola
Company, said: “Women entrepreneurs make significant contributions to
emerging and developing economies; yet have lower access to finance than
their male counterparts. By providing greater access to capital, we are
investing in our own success and the success of the communities we
serve. We are excited about this opportunity to harness the collective
power of our organizations to positively impact women in Eurasia and
Africa.”
Explaining why the IFC decided to
partner with Coca-Cola on this, James Scriven, IFC Director of Financial
Markets, said: “Women entrepreneurs represent significant untapped
economic potential in developing countries - they are essential for
creating jobs and achieving sustainable growth.
This innovative partnership with
Coca-Cola will help expand access to finance for thousands of women who
are part of the company’s supply and distribution chain.” Ugorji
commended the IFC for supporting Coca-Cola in empowering women and urged
women entrepreneurs to take advantage of the initiative to be better
positioned in national development. “Every economically disadvantaged
woman who manages against all odds to become a successful entrepreneur
is to be celebrated because she has created a brighter future for
herself, her children, her neighbors and the world that we all share,”
he said.
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