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Egypt’s Nano Business Credit Gap and Why the Smallest Enterprises Are Being Left Behind

Dr. May El Batran, former Member of Parliament, founding chair of Egypt’s ICT committee, and current chair of the People Development Foundation, joins Bassel Sabri with a perspective few others can offer, she has sat on both the policy side and the grassroots side of Egypt’s financial inclusion challenge.

Her central point is one that gets lost in the headline numbers: consumer credit is booming in Egypt, but nano business credit, loans of $200 to $1,000 to craftspeople and micro-entrepreneurs, is chronically undersupplied and underseen. The financial system finds it structurally easier to finance a purchase than to finance a producer, partly because consumer credit decisions are faster, and margins on consumables can reach 35%.

Her foundation’s track record challenges the conventional risk narrative. In nearly 15 years of operation, defaults have been almost nonexistent, the only write-offs were due to the deaths of borrowers. Productive microcredit, she argues, repays itself from business revenue, creates jobs, and builds repeat customers who return up to eight times.

On collateral, she sees AI and digital presence data as the path to replacing traditional requirements, allowing nano businesses with real customers and real revenue but no audited accounts to finally become bankable.

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