Developing The SME Segment in Kuwait - en
Developing The SME Segment in Kuwait - en
Developing The SME Segment in Kuwait - en
In terms of Phase 1 Report, all areas of improvement and reforms as well as perceptions were based on
the Market Survey, conducting for the purpose of this study. Phase 2 research consisted of effort-based
desktop research.
AlShall makes no guarantees about the accuracy, or completeness of the information, and expresses no
opinion regarding any misrepresentations and omissions that may affect the results of the report. In this
regard, the Owner of the Project acknowledges that such information as provided to AlShall is complete
and represents the actual position of the Project.
AlShall is not liable to any other party that relies on this report for any decision making process. AlShall
disclaims any liability arising from the use of this report.
Both phases attested to one key national necessity missing in the local environment: a national
entrepreneurial policy to complete Kuwait’s SME policy as formulated with the establishment of the
National Fund for SME Development. In addition, a missing gap is the data available on SMEs in
Kuwait, which has the potential to guide both public and private stakeholders in the SME-
entrepreneurial ecosystem. Filling this gap would contribute to guiding linkages between all ecosystem
actors, and allow for incorporating academia and educational institutions in contributing to Kuwait’s
innovation landscape by enhancing Research and Development (R&D) in the country.
Phase 1 consisted of a Market Research to ascertain SME segment characteristics and defining features
from financers and entrepreneurs. The main focus was the NFSD, the SME financial landscape, and
entrepreneurs’ in Kuwait. The Market Research adopted a qualitative research method, the Strengths,
Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats (SWOT) framework to capture financers and entrepreneurs’
perceptions of the NFSD, and the SME segment in Kuwait.
Phase 2 consisted of international benchmarking of the international and regional countries, to assess
levels and types of public involvement in the following areas: size and scope of SMEs based on their
This report (“Phase 1 report”) presents findings from a comprehensive qualitative survey undertaken by
AlShall covering a sample of all stakeholders in Kuwait’s SME space. These included SME financers
(the NFSD, banks and financial institutions) and SME entrepreneurs. Particularly, as part of the survey,
AlShall personnel held interviews and surveys with the NFSD, 10 Banks, 3 financial institutions and 10
entrepreneurs. The entrepreneurs surveyed comprised of five entrepreneurs whose NFSD funding
application was approved, and five whose applications were not. The survey was designed to capture
financers and entrepreneurs’ perceptions of the NFSD, the opportunities, needs and challenges in
relation to the NFSD and the SME segment. AlShall analyzed the survey results through the SWOT
framework (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats). This framework serves well in
analyzing the responses of the various SME market participants.
Kuwait’s SME segment constitutes 3% of GDP and contributes to 23% of formal employment according
to World Bank (2016). This is much lower compared to both developed and developing economies were
GDP contribution of the SME segment varies between 35% to 50% and its employment contribution lies
closer to 50%. Currently, there is no clear unified definition of an SME being adhered to by all the
stakeholders in Kuwait’s SME segment. The definitional discrepancy is illustrated in the table below:
Resolving such definitional discrepancies with a unified definition applicable to the SME segment was
described as a pressing issue by all survey participants.
SMEs are broadly classified into Lifestyle, Modest and High Growth Competitive SMEs. Lifestyle
SMEs are driven by the entrepreneur’s desire for self-employment. Modest SMEs provide an existing
product to an existing market and are characterized by low profitability and exhibit little to no growth.
High Growth Competitive SMEs are innovation drivers and are highly competitive, demonstrated by
high revenue and employee growth (greater than 10% per annum) and include start-ups. The third type
of SME is critical for successful economic diversification and growth. In Kuwait, Lifestyle and Modest
SMEs predominate the SME space. This is evident in the fact that despite employing an estimated 23%
of the workforce, the SME segment only contributes 3% to gross value added (GVA) to Kuwait’s
economy. That being said, there is a rise of entrepreneurial and innovation focused initiatives on part of
private stakeholders targeting the SME segment, aimed at spurring high growth competitive startups
focused on digitization in Kuwait.
Strengths
1. NFSD: Establishment of NFSD is viewed by stakeholders as a positive initiative to support SMEs and to increase
awareness of the high value added nature of the SME segment in the country’s general population
2. Nationals: Marked increase over recent years of Kuwaiti nationals running SMEs
Weaknesses / Challenges
1. Contribution: economic contribution to GDP is minimal at an estimated 3%
2. Government / Institution-related Weaknesses:
Absence of SME-specific laws/regulations
Government’s national SME vision and strategy is unclear to financers & entrepreneurs
Government’s SME-related procedures are long, burdensome and complicated as per entrepreneurs (eg
cumbersome process to receive ministerial certifications and work permits)
3. Financial Weakness:
Banks & financial institutions do not finance start-ups
Perception that there are no business incubators for SMEs in Kuwait; SME personnel are generally viewed
by financers as lacking financial and marketing skills as well as experience
Opportunities
1. Positive Perception of SME ecosystem,: Attitudes of young Kuwaitis have been positively affected as a result of
the reforms and recent growth in the SME segment – the prevailing view is that young Kuwaitis represent a
“wealth of potential entrepreneurs,”
2. Technology: General perception is that several opportunities exist in the SME space for Kuwaitis and that growth
can be accelerated through the adoption of technology
Threats
1. Perception of Public Mismanagement: Perception prevails among entrepreneurs that the current allocation of
funds is mismanaged
2. Unorganized nature of SME ecosystem: Sporadic nature of the SME ecosystem carries a threat that increased
competition will drive out SMEs which require support and a teething period
3. SME Loan Defaults: The fear that a sharp increase in SME bank loan defaults will pose a threat to not only the
SME space but the Kuwaiti economy as a whole
With an allocated capital of KD 2 billion, the National Fund for SME Development (NFSD) was
established in 2013 as per Law no. 98 (2013) (later amended - Law no. 14 (2018)). It was established to
act as Kuwait’s SME one-stop shop to coordinate and promote the activities of SME-related initiatives
in the country. These included providing SMEs with information, training and finance. Specifically, it
was envisaged that NFSD would serve to plug a significant gap in SME financing, evident in the fact
The NFSD lends to startups and SMEs based on an 80/20 percent framework. Eighty percent of the
funding is provided by the NFSD at two percent interest rate, and there is an expectation that banks will
lend NFSD-approved SMEs the remaining 20% at a market interest rate. As per the NFSD 2016-2017
Annual Report, the Fund approved 245 applications with a total financing amount of KD 50.1 million.
Seventy percent of the approved applications were for start-ups in the commercial, services, handicraft
and agriculture sectors. As part of the survey with the banks, their relationship, perception and
challenges in dealing with NFSD were analyzed. These were then reviewed through the SWOT
framework summarized in the table below:
Banks on NFSD:
Strengths
1. Diversification: The NFSD has diversified finance by offering a “great product” – which may enable growth for the
Kuwaiti economy that only the NFSD can offer; the majority of banks surveyed viewed the NFSD as a funding
source that positively complements their reach
2. Start-up support: The NFSD caters to a SME segment that banks can’t cater to: start-ups.
Weaknesses / Challenges
1. Weak communication: Banks, generally, perceive that the communication with NFSD is weak citing instances of:
Misinformation or wrong information provided by NFSD
Unclear guidelines on SME loan application approval and rejection standards
Unclear principles of engagement in place that delineates standard practices between the banks and the
NFSD.
Absence of agreed upon SME definition outlined to unify all actors in the ecosystem
2. Unclear goals: The NFSD’s vision and goals are unclear and they feel that the NFSD has delayed publishing SME
success stories which would help clarify the NFSD’s goals further
3. Operational barriers: Banks, generally, perceive that the NFSD:
Maintains out of date laws, procedures and mechanisms that don’t capture needs of all parties
loan applications challenges which pose time and cost constraints on financial institutions
Lacks a unified leadership due to an unstable / frequently changing board
4. Skill Barriers: Banks are of the view that there is a skills deficit at NFSD. This is evident in three areas:
Weak financial and risk management expertise
Low to no tracking of loans provided in terms of progress and success
lack of SME-related research being published by the NFSD
1
International Monetary Fund, 2014
6. Incentive Framework: The current shared-lending scheme whereby NFSD funds 80% of an entrepreneur’s project
and banks lend the remaining 20% is not profitable for banks; further the banks emphasize that the scheme should
include all banks rather than just some banks as this results in lack of competition in the space (as highlighted by
the IMF as well)
7. Perception of Margin of Authority: A series of banks stated that they perceived the NFSD to have given
them a margin of authority. Rather, the banks would prefer a standardized engagement and communication
framework to guide the relationship between the two parties.
8.
Opportunities
1. SME Credit Bureau: Banks see potential in establishing platforms for the exchange of credit and financial
information on SMEs to improve the segment’s access to funds
2. Collaboration: Banks highlighted the strong potential for more collaboration among the numerous stakeholders that
could be further facilitated by better and more NFSD-led financial institution’s engagement and communication
Threats
1. Lack of clarity: Banks highlighted that not understanding what legal enforcements are in place on SME loan defaults
serves as a strong threat/disincentive for banks from participating in the NFSD schemes and/or engaging in SME
lending
The entrepreneurs that were surveyed also expressed strong opinions about the NFSD, which were
analyzed within the SWOT framework. The below table summarizes the entrepreneurs’ feedback:
Weaknesses / Challenges
1. Discrepancy: Some perceived there to be a discrepancy between the NFSD’s vision and its practice
2. Lack of clarity: Lack of understanding which types of sectors the NFSD is willing to provision funding for and
which it isn’t
3. Communication: No unified perception by entrepreneurs on the quality of communication they receive in regards
to funding requirements
4. Advisory: Low quality of advisory services
5. Marketing: Lack of effort made by the NFSD to publicly show their efficiency via for example, marketing or
promoting success stories
Opportunities
1. Increased Entrepreneurial Trend: The NFSD has made SMEs and entrepreneurship a trend
2. Optimism: Entrepreneurs are optimistic about SMEs contribution on the national economy
Four key disincentives to SME lending were highlighted by the banks, as part of the market survey.
These included the associated risk of lending, requirement of excessive effort in due diligence, low
profitability and poor global survival rates of the SMEs. In relation to this, four key reasons were cited
by the banks for rejecting applications for SME loans. These included:
1. Poor and/or unavailable financial statements provided by SME applicants, citing financials with
exaggerated assumptions, inaccurate financials, poor balance of sheets and inaccurate
justifications of it and of the liability and audits of an SME.
2. Poor quality of a feasibility studies submitted to the bank with an inadequate risk assessment
3. Financers noted that some of the sectors that SMEs are looking to enter aren’t supported by the
NFSD or are not clear enough for financers to make value judgments on.
Financers expressed the view that their role in SME financing has evolved with the establishment of the
NFSD. Pre-NFSD, banks were instrumental to the initial growth of the SME segment through the
provision of SME loans. However, with the advent of NFSD, their role has transformed to one of
distributing NFSD funding and serving as a communication medium between the SMEs and NFSD and
CBK. The key challenges which the banks continue to face when engaging with SMEs and the SME
ecosystem along with key recommendations made by the survey participants are summarized in the
table below:
Key challenges faced by the banks with SMEs and the SME ecosystem and recommendations:
Financers challenges with SMEs
1. SME Characteristics: These are features of the various SMEs the financers deal with which make the relationship
difficult to initiate and sustain:
Business objectives and valuation: a great majority of SMEs present business goals, objectives and
organizational structures which are unclear; an entrepreneur’s valuation of their business is generally
unrealistic and the size of loan demanded is excessive compared to actual capital required
Profit: entrepreneur business plans generally exhibit high profit expectations without any business or
financial track records
Non-reliability and Risk Aversion: financers expressed that for a significant number of SMEs they dealt
with, the documentation provided is not reliable (“entrepreneurs take their time when submitting missing
bank documents, and aren’t as prepared when attending bank meetings”); entrepreneurs are also very risk
averse and look to exit on first sign of low performance
2. SME Expertise & Knowledge: This is to do with the competency of the SMEs with which the financers generally
have to deal with:
Financial management: entrepreneurs generally lack financial management expertise
Commitment: several entrepreneurs exhibit a lack of commitment in repayment of the loan requiring time
consuming follow-ups
Data: business information provided by SMEs is generally incomplete (with no market study for instance)
Financers challenges with the SME ecosystem
Financers face three key challenges with the SME ecosystem. These include:
1. Weak financial infrastructure: The legal framework to cater to the SME space is viewed to be weak, especially
with respect to financial information verification provided by SMEs (eg. lack of information sharing between banks
and NFSD on a applicants)
2. Unclear CBK guidelines: Banks maintain that CBK guidelines on SME capital allocation remain unclear which
impedes profit potential and transaction efficiency
Section 4: Entrepreneurs
The fourth and last section of the report covers feedback from entrepreneurs as part of the survey on
their interaction with NFSD (covered earlier) and the key challenges faced by them.
The entrepreneur’s feedback with respect to their dealing with NFSD is summarized above. The key
challenges that the entrepreneurs expressed as part of the survey are summarized in the table below:
1. Resource Capacities: Challenges faced in securing land and business locations and infrastructure expenses such
as electricity and water. Additionally, the labor market has a skills deficit creating a dependency on expat labor
2. Government-related: Lack of support in securing resources for the SMEs (land, permits, funding, manpower
approvals) and lengthy delays in application approval which adversely impact entrepreneur morale.
Globally, SMEs have proven to be a critical segment to drive economic diversification, innovation,
economic growth and sustainable employment. However, SME characteristics in each country differ
qualitatively and quantitatively, due to differences of several factors such as quality of skilled labor,
structure of the economy and nature of public involvement in enhancing the SME segment.
SME Definition:
There is no standard definition of an SME being adhered to globally. The common parameters used are
mainly quantitative firm characteristics such as the number of employees, turnover, capital, assets and
investments. The most commonly used quantitative indicators are the number of employees and annual
sales volume (turnover). In the Arab region, countries with a legally enshrined definition of SMEs are
Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Palestine, Egypt, Bahrain, Tunisia, Mauritania,
and Morocco.2 In terms of employee size, throughout the Arab countries, a small enterprise ranges from
4 to 50 employees. The average medium size of an enterprise ranges between 19 to 250 employees for
the majority of surveyed countries. Some countries such as UAE, Bahrain and Malaysia use an SME
definition that distinguishes between SMEs operating in the trade sector, the services sector, and the
manufacturing sector.
2
Arab Monetary Fund (2017)
SME contribution to GDP in the Arab countries range from 23% to 80%, with Egypt being the highest
at 80% followed by Tunisia at 73%, followed by Jordan at 40% and the UAE at 39%. Kuwait lags
behind in terms of SME contribution to GDP with an estimated contribution of 3%. This is concerning
as SME enterprises in Kuwait have been estimated to comprise of 94% of all enterprises and
employment contribution at 23%. As discussed in Phase 1 Report, a key reason for this scenario is the
predominance of lifestyle and modest SMEs, mostly in the food and restaurant sector, producing
products are not high value-added in addition to the national economy’s dependence on oil exports.
For Kuwait, KIBS has estimated the percentages in manufacturing at 20.7%, construction at 9.9%, trade
and commerce at 38.6%, real estate, renting and business activities at 27.3%, and other types of
businesses at 3.5% in 2016. From the Market Research conducted, there is a perception of growth of
SMEs as highest in the food and beverages sector segment at 20%, followed by 11% growth in small
manufacturing (plastics and glass), followed by IT and e-commerce.
The environment within which an SME operates is shaped by key factors which include legal/ regulatory
frameworks and infrastructures, administrative procedures for market entry and growth including
business and licensing requirements, labor and product regulations, and agencies for SME growth,
development, supervision, and internationalization such as SME promotional bodies and SME one-stop
shops.
Business Environment:
The World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business Indicator is a key metric used by practitioners to evaluate
the business environment of a country. In terms of starting a business rank, Kuwait ranks at 133 out of
190 countries and from the surveyed countries, outperforms Saudi Arabia at 141, Palestine at 171 for
2018. In terms of Ease of Doing Business, Kuwait’s overall ease of doing business is 62.20 points with
100 points as the best performance, and 0 the lowest performance. In terms of Kuwait’s Ease of Doing
Business rank, Kuwait was ranked was 97, in contrast to its 2017 ranking of 96. The most business
friendly regulations of countries surveyed in order of friendliest are Singapore at rank 2, the UK at rank
9, the UAE at rank 11, Malaysia at rank 15 and Germany at rank 24.
In Kuwait, it takes 38 days for a man to start a business, and 39 days for a woman, which confirms the
Phase 1 report findings of the time-consuming nature of government procedures for entrepreneurs. The
only other country surveyed that had a higher number of days to start a business is Palestine at 43 days
for men and 44 days for women.
Throughout the surveyed countries, the type of regulatory frameworks in place for SMEs differ. Kuwait,
UAE, Palestine, Egypt and Mauritania, Malaysia, Germany and the UK all have regulatory
infrastructures that distinguish between SMEs from larger enterprises. Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Lebanon,
Sudan, Tunisia and Morocco, SMEs operate under company law as the legal apparatuses in those
Throughout international surveyed countries, the regulatory frameworks in place which focus on SME
finance focus specifically on easing access to finance for SMEs, which may encompass the provision
of public funds to SMEs. The table below benchmarks the Kuwait regulatory framework for SMEs with
respect to those of other countries.
Mauritania
Singapore
Germany
Malaysia
Palestine
Lebanon
Morocco
Tunisia
Kuwait
Jordan
Sudan
Egypt
UAE
KSA
UK
There is a law or
ministerial decree to
√ √ √ √ √ √
Laws to strength/ organize SME
segment
boost SME
segment Laws and regulations
differ based on type of
√ √ √ √ √
enterprise activity
Specialized
commercial court or √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √
Judicial courts division
and bodies to
implement laws
Commercial disputes
fall under general
√ √ √ √ √ √
judicial courts
In Kuwait, the NFSD is the public entity dedicated to boost the domestic SME segment and which is
meant to act as a one-stop shop focused on SME funding, capability-building, and promotion. From the
countries surveyed, Malaysia’s SME Corporation (SME Corp.) serves a similar purpose in acting as the
public central coordinating agency, whose aim is to coordinate and synthesize all SME-related matters
across all Ministries and public bodies. Although the NFSD and SME Corp. are very similar in their
scope, purpose and intention, , there are stark differences. One notable gap in NFSD’s role is that the
scope of synthesizing and coordinating activities to develop Kuwait’s SME segment is unclear. Others
gaps between the two discussed in the report are in the areas of capacity-building, range of available
financial products and services available to entrepreneurs and SMEs, education and training programs,
and reducing access to information for SMEs and on SMEs.
Green Lane Policy: Eases SME access to obtaining government procurement, fast tracks e-procurement, provides SMEs
Malaysia
priority in procurement in the Ministry of Finance owned companies
Public Procurement: Federal authorities must contract at least 10% of their procurement budget for purchasing,
UAE servicing, and consulting to SMEs. In addition, state-owned enterprises where the federal government holds stakes of
more than 25% must ensure at least 5% of their contracts for local SMEs.
2010 Legal stipulation: cut tenders into smaller lots to enable small firms to apply for public tenders in the context of
supply contracts.
Procurement law specifically encourages setting aside SMEs provision 10% of goods to public sector, however, no
Egypt
indication that this is actually enforced.
It should be noted that domestic firms are favored over foreign-based companies when competing for tenders. By law,
domestic firms are granted priority if their bid does not exceed the lowest foreign bid by more than 15%3
Decree No. 1039, (established on the 23 March 2014) is a law that reserves 20% of public procurement to SMEs
Tunisia
annually. A new online website was established in 2013 used by ten government bodies to electronically process bids.4
3
OECD, 2014
4
OECD, 2014
In terms of how international countries have dealt with reducing regulatory burdens, the table below
briefly summarizes the availability of regulatory reforms for SMEs to ease SMEs information
deficiencies:
Business Procedures
No Yes Yes Yes Yes
streamlined
The SME financial landscape globally is marked with a financing gap, wherein in the MENA region,
the International Finance Corporation estimates that the size of total financing gap of all SMEs to be
$210 to $240 billion in 2017. 5 The root of this financing gap is information asymmetry between
suppliers of finance and demanders of finance resulting in the demand for finance on part of SMEs is
high, and the supply of it, low. The gap also exists in Kuwait, were banks stressed the unprofitability
and risk involved in lending to SMEs.
5
Saleem, Qamar. 2017. Overcoming constraints to SME development in MENA countries and enhancing access to finance
: IFC advisory services in the Middle East and North Africa (English). Washington, D.C. : World Bank Group.
5.7% 5.5%
6.0% 5% 5.3% 5.3%
5.0% 4%
4.0%
Percentage
3.0%
2.0%
1.0%
0.0%
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Year
Sources Central Bank of Kuwait, Financial Stability Reports (2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012)
The volume of SME lending to all bank lending is not available on Arab countries including Kuwait,
for international countries the data does exist, and it is important to account for it as it allows for fully
grasping how involved financers are in SME lending. In the UK, Germany and Singapore the
percentage of SME loans to all business loans was 21%, 15% and 13% respectively. In Malaysia in
2016, the same percentage was high at 42.7%. For Kuwait, the volume of SME lending is not officially
available, however, estimates are in the range of 4.5% to 5.5%, which is lower than ~10% average
estimated for the Arab region according to the Arab Monetary Fund 2016 Report.
20 16 15 14 13 10.8
15 9.5 9.7
7.3 7.1 5.5
10 5.0
2.2 1.3 1.2
5
0
Examples of reforms being undertaken to improve SME access include Egypt launching a distinctive
SME listing, Nile Stock Exchange (NILEX) on the Cairo and Alexandria Stock Exchanges to better
cater to SME enterprises. Similarly, Tunisia in 2007 launched an alternative market, Marché Alternatif.
More recently, Saudi Arabia launch of Nomu in February of 2017. Nomu is an alternative equity market
on the Saudi Arabian Stock Exchange which caters to all enterprises, including SMEs, to publicly list
their companies. In both Malaysia and Singapore, a sponsor driven alternative investment market has
been developed modeled on the UK’s AIM.
Loan guarantees seek to reduce the risk of financing or investing in SMEs, by spreading the risk of
lending between two or more parties. Globally, government loan guarantee practices include some of
AlShall Consulting Company 20
following; supporting loan and/or counter loan guarantees, and providing tax incentives for the private
sector to support SME activities. This includes in some countries such as Malaysia, as a direct
government intervention has been establishing a loan guarantee scheme for SMEs, and in Germany,
were the KfW counter guarantees SME loans guarantees.
In the case of Kuwait, KIBS 2016 Report notes a very important dynamic underpinning the NFSD
shared funding scheme of 80/20 percent framework between them and banks, which is how based on
Kuwaiti commercial law, both the NFSD nor the government aren’t allowed to provide guarantees for
losses that banks may face. For KIBS, this means that the NFSD’s funding scheme is not incentive
enough for banks to lend to SMEs, which the market survey results further reflect.
In terms of collateral, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Palestine, Tunisia and Mauritania allow for the use
moveable assets as collateral as prevailing legal stipulations allow moveable assets to act as a loan
guarantee. However, in other countries it is not legally permissible to use moveable assets as collateral
or loan guarantee. In Malaysia, Singapore, Germany and the UK, collateral is a determinant to financial
institutions SME lending decisions and practices.
Kuwait’s human development rank for 2017 was 56 out of 189 countries reflecting a relatively high
level of human development. On this indicator, Kuwait’s ranking is better than Malaysia (57), Lebanon
(80), Jordan (95), Tunisia (95), Egypt (115), Palestine (119), Morocco (123), Mauritania (159), and
Sudan (167). However, according to the Global Innovation Ranking, Kuwait ranked at 60 and is
surpassed by UK (4), Singapore (5), Germany (9), Malaysia (35), UAE (38), Qatar (51) and Saudi
Arabia (58). As per the third indicator, percentage of workforce employed in knowledge-intensive
industries, which reflects differences in the knowledge economy, Kuwait ranked 79, with a score of
Capability-Building Initiatives
Having assessed Kuwait’s indicators on capabilities, initiatives to promote entrepreneurs’ and SME
capabilities are explored. In Kuwait, the NFSD’s capability-building consists of Incubation of SMEs
and Business Development Program Services in four areas: Light manufacturing (with a focus on oil
and gas supply chain), creative industries (of media and design services), Information and
Communications Technology (ICT), and a generic hub that supports potential SMEs in line with the
NFSD strategic goals. The Hubs manage the support relationship with SMEs of the NFSD, and provide
the following services: working-space, coaching, mentorship, training, advisory services, networking
and financing, based on four areas outlined above. Under the Hubs, there are Incubators, whose aim it
is to support entrepreneurs in developing business concepts, and to promote a culture of
entrepreneurship. Incubators are available for students at local universities, university graduates, and
government employees who want to open a private business
6
Exact replica of Operating Model outlined in National Fund for Small and Medium Enterprises, Kuwait, Annual Report
2015-2016, pp.15
In terms of international countries, the BNM in Malaysia is the most immersive in SME segment
development, as not only does it finance SMEs under its Special Funds for SMEs, but additionally the
BNM runs the Small Debt Resolution Scheme which assists viable SMEs who require advisory on
resolving financing accounts. This is complemented with a unique capability-building program for
financial institutions on SMEs, known as the ‘Train the Trainers Program on SME Financing (TTT).’
TTT runs in collaboration with associations of financial institutions and trains financial institutions
officers nationwide to become trainers themselves on SMEs.
Below is a summary table for various countries which illustrates whether these countries have in place
a national strategy to develop SME capability, training programs for SMEs, ongoing policy reform in
SME capacity building and banking sector capacity building initiatives:
Singapore
Germany
Malaysia
Palestine
Morocco
Tunisia
Kuwait
Jordan
Arabia
Sudan
Egypt
Saudi
UK
National strategy or
plan to develop
√ √ √ √ √ √
SME capacities
Training program
Capacity- to develop SME
√ √ √ √
building capacities
for SMEs
Ongoing policy
reform to
√ √
develop/strengthen
an SME capacity
building strategy
One overarching global best standard is entrepreneurial policies, initiatives, or practices that target
entrepreneurs and SMEs who have the potential for growth (high growth SMEs). In the context of
Kuwait, the country’s adoption of the NFSD as a public institute to streamline financial and non-
financial support for SMEs proved a step in the right direction. It resulted in imbuing a sense of
confidence in embarking on entrepreneurial projects among the youth, attested to by the perception of
financers and entrepreneurs’ that the cultural status of the entrepreneur is high. However, further
investigation on the status of entrepreneurship and innovation in Kuwait is required, as reflect by, the
Global Innovation Rank of Kuwait at 60, and is regionally surpassed by UAE (38), Qatar (51) and Saudi
Arabia (58).
Kuwait’s SME segment development should evolve to combine and link SME segment development
with national entrepreneurial development. The latter is necessary not only to strengthen the local SME
segment, but as global trends attest to the relevance of entrepreneurship, innovation, critical thinking,
R&D, to labor markets, financial services, education, health, environmental sustainability, and
overwhelmingly, to develop healthy and competitive markets.