The Job Opportunities and Business Support (JOBS) Project is an
integrated private sector development program funded by
USAID/Bangladesh
and implemented by the
Center for Institutional Reform
and Informal Sector (IRIS) at the
University of Maryland.
Since 1997 the Project has worked to assist Bangladeshi enterprises
to expand their sales in domestic and international markets through
a variety of interrelated activities including identifying
sub-sectors that offer significant growth potential, selecting and
building the capacity of small and medium enterprises to manufacture
diversified export products, coordinating skill development training
for workers, coordinating the provision of international technical
assistance, assisting in product development and improvement,
developing international and domestic markets, facilitating loans,
and coordinating technical assistance to the government to develop a
supportive policy and regulatory environment.
JOBS and Sector Focus:
The
Project has been assisting in the development of various sectors including leather
goods, footwear, home textiles, floor coverings, diversified jute
products since its inception. Recently it added handmade paper
products, diversified coconut products, personal protective
equipment, electrical products, and information technology to its
target sectors. Sectors are selected based on the following
criteria:
-
Their products are exportable;
-
They draw on labor- intensive production chains;
-
They rely on locally procurable raw materials;
-
They have potential to double or triple their worker’s
compensation; and
-
They can generate employment for women.
For
the development of each sector, a vigorous, market-driven
methodology is applied: locate an international market, get buy-in
from entrepreneurs, invite an international expert to produce
samples for the target market, participate in trade fairs to obtain
orders, develop a skilled work force through cluster-based training,
backward link the entrepreneur/lead buyer to the clusters (or link
small and medium enterprises with upstream micro-enterprises), and
facilitate entrepreneurs’ access to finance.
JOBS
and Association/Cluster Model:
JOBS was originally designed as three inter-related components:
micro-enterprise support, SME support, and policy. In its first
years, the Project worked closely with leading NGOs to provide
technical and business training to their micro-enterprise clients on
a regional basis, creating several thousands of jobs in the process.
At the same time, it was developing the production and marketing
capacities of larger enterprises in selected sub-sectors. At the
same time, the Project was looking for ways to integrate its work
with the two types of enterprises, and found the answer in the
cluster concept. Under this arrangement, SMEs contract with local
micro-enterprises for intermediate products (for example, soles)
that they use for producing end products (shoes). By providing
training to SMEs and micro-enterprises in a cluster, JOBS helps SMEs
to meet market demand while creating employment and generating
income for micro-enterprise workers.
To assist micro-enterprises in other areas, JOBS has also helped
form associations of NGO micro-producers. Under this program,
independent associations of pineapple producers, milk producers, and
weavers have been formed to link them to markets and financial
institutions. This has led to increased prices for their products,
and access to finance from commercial banks.
JOBS Information and Communication
Technology:
In
keeping with its importance to economic development, JOBS is working
in various fields of ICT, including e-governance, e-commerce,
e-policy, and e-human resources development. To this end, JOBS has
assisted the Law Commission of Bangladesh to draft the proposed
Information Technology (IT) Act. The Project has also organized two
major conferences on e-commerce and IT, which have led to the
development of a policy agenda to be implemented by the
government. JOBS works to develop the capacity of the three ICT
associations and is studying Bangladesh’s potential for ICT enabled
services, assisting government organizations to incorporate and
implement ICT in their operations and working to establish an
internationally recognized CISCO certification program in
Bangladesh.
JOBS and Enabling
Environment:
JOBS
has undertaken a number of initiatives to improve the enabling
environment for SME and micro-enterprises in Bangladesh, in keeping
with the IRIS experience that consistently demonstrates that the
quality of the policy environment is the determining factor in
achieving sustainable development and poverty alleviation. JOBS’s
main sphere of policy activity centers around access to credit by
SMEs. In a country where many micro-enterprises have relatively easy
access to credit through microfinance, SMEs face greater hurdles,
because they are too large to qualify for microfinance loans but
lack the collateral that commercial banks require. In response, the
Project, with the help of local and international experts, has
drafted the proposed Secured Transaction Act, which is currently
being reviewed by the government. This Act, if adopted, will set a
strong legal basis for lending against movable assets. As mentioned
earlier, JOBS is also a major player in the development of a
supportive environment for the use of e-commerce for economic
development. Earlier policy successes include the removal of
interest rate caps on SME loans, the raise of the VAT rate floor,
and the expansion of the mandate of the Credit Information Bureau to
provide information about SME loans.
|