CÔTE D’IVOIRE · BUSINESS
Key Facts
—The deal: NSIA Banque Côte d’Ivoire has signed a €30 million facility, about $34.2 million, with Britain’s development finance institution.
—The lender: The money comes from British International Investment, the UK government’s development finance arm.
—The purpose: It will fund lending to small and medium-sized enterprises across Côte d’Ivoire.
—The owner: NSIA is the insurance and banking group built by Ivorian billionaire Jean Kacou Diagou.
—The gap it targets: African small businesses face a financing shortfall the African Development Bank puts at around $330 billion.
—The pattern: It is part of a wider flow of foreign development capital into African banks to reach small firms.
NSIA Banque Côte d’Ivoire has secured a €30 million facility (about $34.2 million) from British International Investment to expand its SME lending across the country. The deal channels British development capital into the small firms that drive Ivorian jobs and growth.
RTAsk Rio TimesAsk about Latin American markets, currencies, and companies — answered from our reporting and live data.Start asking →
What the NSIA SME lending deal involves
NSIA Banque Côte d’Ivoire has signed a €30 million facility, around $34.2 million, with British International Investment. The bank will use the money to expand loans to small and medium-sized enterprises.
British International Investment, known until recently as the CDC Group, is the United Kingdom’s development finance institution. It backs private-sector projects in developing economies, often by lending to local banks that then on-lend to businesses.
For NSIA, the facility is fresh firepower aimed at a segment many banks find hard to serve. Small firms are numerous, but they often lack the collateral and the records that make lending easy.
Facilities like this usually take the form of a multi-year credit line. NSIA draws on it to write loans, then repays British International Investment as those loans are repaid.
Why small business is the target
Small and medium-sized enterprises are the backbone of the Ivorian economy, as they are across much of Africa. They employ the most people and create the most new jobs.
Yet they struggle to borrow. The African Development Bank has put the continent’s small-business financing gap at roughly $330 billion.
Closing even part of that gap can lift growth and employment. That is why development lenders increasingly route money through local banks rather than fund projects directly.
Banks often prefer to lend to governments and large corporates, where the paperwork is cleaner and the sums are larger. That leaves a long tail of viable small firms starved of credit.
Who Jean Kacou Diagou is
NSIA is the group built by Jean Kacou Diagou, one of West Africa’s best-known business figures. He founded the company in the 1990s and grew it into a major insurance and banking group.
Today NSIA spans both insurance and banking across more than a dozen African countries. It is one of the largest home-grown financial groups in francophone Africa.
The Côte d’Ivoire bank sits at the heart of that group. A deal that strengthens its lending book strengthens the whole.
NSIA has grown through acquisitions and partnerships over the years. That track record makes it a credible partner for a lender like British International Investment.
How development finance works here
The structure is common but powerful. A foreign institution lends to a trusted local bank, which knows its market and can spread the money across many small borrowers.
It lets outside capital reach businesses too small for a development bank to finance one by one. The local lender carries the relationships and the credit risk.
For Britain, there is a strategic dimension too. Backing African small firms builds commercial ties and goodwill at a time when several powers are courting the continent.
Many such facilities also come with technical support, helping the bank sharpen how it assesses small-business risk. The aim is to make SME lending a lasting line of business, not a one-off.
Why it matters for Côte d’Ivoire
Côte d’Ivoire is one of West Africa’s fastest-growing economies, led by cocoa, services and the busy port at Abidjan. Its small firms supply much of that activity.
More credit for them can mean more hiring, more investment and more resilience when commodity prices swing. The effect is felt in workshops and shops, not just boardrooms.
The facility also signals confidence in the Ivorian banking system. Foreign lenders do not commit to partners they do not trust.
Abidjan has grown into one of francophone Africa’s main financial centres. A deeper market for small-business credit would broaden who shares in the country’s growth.
What to watch
The test will be how quickly NSIA deploys the money, and to whom. Reaching genuinely small firms, rather than only the larger and safer ones, is the harder task.
If it works, expect more such facilities. Development lenders tend to scale up with partners that deliver.
Frequently asked questions
What is the NSIA SME lending deal?
It is a €30 million facility, about $34.2 million, that NSIA Banque Côte d’Ivoire secured from British International Investment. The bank will use it to expand lending to small and medium-sized enterprises.
Who is British International Investment?
It is the United Kingdom’s development finance institution, formerly the CDC Group. It backs private-sector growth in developing economies, often by lending to local banks.
Why does SME lending matter in Côte d’Ivoire?
Small and medium-sized firms employ the most people and drive growth, but they struggle to borrow. The African Development Bank estimates Africa’s small-business financing gap at around $330 billion.
Who owns NSIA?
NSIA is the insurance and banking group founded by Ivorian billionaire Jean Kacou Diagou. It operates across more than a dozen African countries.
The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map →
View original source — Rio Times ↗

