Advancing Youth Entrepreneurship and Financial Inclusion
The engagement focused on deepening collaboration to advance financial inclusion and strengthen entrepreneurship outcomes, particularly for young people and MSMEs in Kenya.
Key areas of discussion included:
🔹 Impact Assessment
The need to embed robust impact assessment frameworks to ensure financial inclusion policies translate into measurable improvements in livelihoods, enterprise growth, and financial resilience.
🔹 Financial Inclusion Policy Alignment
Exploring ways to align Kenya’s financial inclusion agenda with global best practices, while remaining responsive to local realities—especially within the informal and MSME sectors.
🔹 Youth Entrepreneurship Readiness
Emphasis was placed on developing practical tools and programs that prepare young people to become entrepreneurship-oriented, financially literate, and investment-ready from an early stage.
🔹 Tiered Credit Systems
Discussions highlighted the importance of government catalytic funds adopting a tiered credit system that enable a graduated access to finance( near market rate, affordable and zero interest grant )—to nurture and grow credit access capacity of Kenyans at the bottom of the economic pyramid.
🔹 Nurturing Positive Credit Behaviour
Both parties underscored the need to cultivate good credit habits through education, incentives, and data-driven credit profiling, particularly for first-time borrowers.
🔹 Re-engineering Financial Ecosystems
The meeting explored how Kenya can re-engineer its financial systems to better serve MSMEs—leveraging digital finance, alternative data, and inclusive policy design.
This partnership presents an opportunity to accelerate Kenya’s journey toward a more inclusive, resilient, and entrepreneurship-driven economy, ensuring that no aspiring entrepreneur is left behind.