GCCI Board Member Dawda Sarge (far right) says private sector “shy away from investing sufficiently in national development due to high risks like weak governance, regulatory uncertainties, and weak rule of law among other structural barriers.” (Photo: MSJoof/TNBES) |
“It will be necessary for all socio-economic
stakeholders to engage in policy dialogue to design a viable strategy for the
private sector’s effective participation in funding for national development,”
said Dawda Sarge, a board member of GCCI.
On
May 6, the association of non-governmental organisations, Tango, hosted its 11th
Policy Dialogue Series under the theme: directing corporate social
responsibility towards development organisations.
That
forum, meant to devise ways of tapping more funding from the business sector in
The Gambia, brought together actors from the civil society, the business sector
and the government.
Tango
said the majority of NGOs in The Gambia, involved in service provision in all
sectors and regions, largely depend on external sources for funding of their programmes
and interventions.
But
tapping external funding for local development is “becoming increasingly
difficult” since the 2008 financial crisis and due to “donor-fatigue”,
according to the NGOs grouping.
Shy
away from investing
Mr. Sarge said the private sector usually hesitates,
and “shy away from investing sufficiently in national development due to high
risks like weak governance at sovereign level, regulatory uncertainties, and
weak rule of law among other structural barriers”.
“There are also bottlenecks such as the short-term
orientation to investor incentives which makes it unlikely for [private sector
operators] to invest sufficiently in national development,” he said.
GCCI suggested that the government embark on some
policy responses to encourage greater private sector investment in national
development by creating a stronger enabling environment through an effective
legal policy regulatory framework.
It also said the use of local money and assets to
build an inclusive and equitable society through development organisations
requires trust that NGOs are worth funding to make good use of the money for
social change.
A
good policy
Lamin Camara,
a deputy permanent secretary at
the Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs, said The Gambia wants to see a
private sector-led economy.
As such, he said the government is taking a
“holistic approach to financing development” that include supporting efforts to
strengthen domestic resources, resource mobilization, addressing and harnessing
more private investment.
Camara said a public-private partnership
directorate, PPPD, has been established within the ministry of finance and
“very soon we will have ‘a good policy’ formulated, and regulations that would
guide the public and private sector to create an enabling environment.”
“We believe in partnership for development, although
such partnership must be [based] on inclusive transparency [and] inclusivity
accountability to build trust,” he said.
Omar Badjie, executive director of Action Aid
International The Gambia, who described as a “very dangerous situation” when a
country relies entirely on external sources for its development, said a
partnership is needed.
Develop
accountability tools
“We must form
a partnership – a public-private-civil society partnership, to ensure that we
are designing programmes for development and implementing them, and it is a
partnership that is based on trust, accountability,” he said.
Badjie said NGOs are in fact accountable to the
communities they work with and to the donors.
“We are prepared to work with you (private sector)
to develop accountability tools that we’ll all respect and make sure that the
money that you are investing is used accountably,” he said.
While
NGOs engage in providing education, health, food, environmental management
skills, income generation, self-employment, and higher agricultural production,
the private sector have supported similar initiatives as in corporate social
responsibility.
Written by Modou S. Joof
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