Micro, small and medium-sized companies (MSMEs) have been encouraged to take advantage of e-commerce and technological solutions as the country continues to try to navigate through the pandemic.
To this end, the Ministry of Trade and Industry continues to implement the National E-commerce Strategy, which aims to create an enabling environment that facilitates and promotes e-commerce for local businesses to serve domestic and international consumer markets.
While it is accepted that the private sector drives e-commerce, the ministry said in a press release, Government’s role will be to ensure the right environment is created for businesses to derive tangible benefits from e-commerce.
The onset of the pandemic forced bankers, consumers and retailers to move away from manual processes and cash payment towards leveraging technology for digital forms of payments. It has forced businesses to rethink how and where goods are retailed and how payment transactions are conducted.
In this regard, the ministry recently partnered with the Bankers Association (BATT) to host a webinar themed “Digital Payments Solutions for MSMEs.”
The session sought to raise awareness of e-commerce among the MSMEs and provide ways in which they can capture and capitalise on the benefits of ecommerce through the adoption of digital solutions such as online electronic and contactless payments to make business processes more efficient.
The session, which was attended by 140 entrepreneurs, included presentations by First Citizens Bank, Scotiabank, Royal Bank of Canada, Republic Bank Ltd and Citibank detailing their cost-efficient and accessible products and services available to MSMEs.
BATT said the collaboration was a successful private-sector partnership as it relates to matters of mutual interest such as trade and business.
The banks represented detailed various online payment and cash management solutions available from their organisations to entrepreneurs such as Royal Bank’s Multipay and EZPay 2.0 solutions, First Citizens Bank’s EasyBiz solution, Republic Bank’s E-pay Solution and Scotiabank’s Cash Management System.
The common features of these offerings were that they are convenient, affordable and aimed at growing businesses regardless of size. They also shared the requirements for adopting ecommerce in business practices and the importance of having efficient cash management.
Entrepreneurs were also educated on the trends and solutions for Latin America and the Caribbean in commercial banking. The association acknowledged the limitations faced especially by micro and small enterprises in accessing the banks’ services and gave the commitment to actively work towards making their services more cost efficient and accessible as digital payments and ecommerce will assist in surviving, reviving and adapting during this pandemic.
The Ministry of Trade is working with the Treasury Department, under the Single Electronic Window Expansion Project, to define the requirements for the implementation of electronic payment systems