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The challenges faced by small & medium sized enterprises (SMEs) in accessing credit in Tanzania: perspectives in the time of Covid-19

This dissertation explores the financing challenges faced by small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Tanzania during the Covid-19 pandemic. Employing a qualitative research design with interviews with representatives from SMEs and financial institutions, the study explored the perspectives of S...

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Main Author: Tarimo, Asha
Other Authors: Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Tarimo, Asha
author2 Alhassan, Abdul Latif
author_browse Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Tarimo, Asha
author_facet Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Tarimo, Asha
author_sort Tarimo, Asha
collection Thesis
description This dissertation explores the financing challenges faced by small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Tanzania during the Covid-19 pandemic. Employing a qualitative research design with interviews with representatives from SMEs and financial institutions, the study explored the perspectives of SMEs seeking financing (demand side) and financial institutions offering it (supply side). The thematic findings reveal that SMEs, especially those in sectors such as hospitality, tourism and trade, encountered intense challenges due to revenue declines, asset depreciations and increased risk perceptions among lenders. SMEs reported experiencing onerous information requirements, stringent terms, increased collateral requirements, and reduced access to financing during the pandemic, these insights were however not the same for the health sector as some SMEs indicated favourable experiences in accessing financing during the pandemic period. The study also found a gap in SME awareness of government support programs with most participants unaware of initiatives like the Bank of Tanzania's Covid-19 liquidity facility, suggesting a need for improved outreach and communication in future crisis events. On the financing side, financial institutions demonstrated a cautious financing approach due to economic uncertainty and falling business activity with priority being on risk reduction through prioritizing low-risk clients and protecting financial institutions through enhanced financing conditions and collateral. The research concludes that Tanzanian SMEs faced increased challenges in accessing financing during the pandemic due to economic uncertainty, reduced revenues, increased risk perception of SMEs by financial partners, inadequate and ineligible collateral and the lack of comprehensive support programmes to uniquely support SMEs over the course of the pandemic. Recommendations emphasize improved support from development partners and the government for SMEs and the financial institutions that support SMEs during crisis events to ensure a resilient SME sector. Future studies could expand by investigating sector-specific impacts and exploring quantitative approaches to measure the financing challenges of SMEs more broadly during crisis periods.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:09.918Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42741 The challenges faced by small & medium sized enterprises (SMEs) in accessing credit in Tanzania: perspectives in the time of Covid-19 Tarimo, Asha Alhassan, Abdul Latif Kabinda, Mundia small and medium-sized enterprises Tanzania Covid-19 This dissertation explores the financing challenges faced by small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Tanzania during the Covid-19 pandemic. Employing a qualitative research design with interviews with representatives from SMEs and financial institutions, the study explored the perspectives of SMEs seeking financing (demand side) and financial institutions offering it (supply side). The thematic findings reveal that SMEs, especially those in sectors such as hospitality, tourism and trade, encountered intense challenges due to revenue declines, asset depreciations and increased risk perceptions among lenders. SMEs reported experiencing onerous information requirements, stringent terms, increased collateral requirements, and reduced access to financing during the pandemic, these insights were however not the same for the health sector as some SMEs indicated favourable experiences in accessing financing during the pandemic period. The study also found a gap in SME awareness of government support programs with most participants unaware of initiatives like the Bank of Tanzania's Covid-19 liquidity facility, suggesting a need for improved outreach and communication in future crisis events. On the financing side, financial institutions demonstrated a cautious financing approach due to economic uncertainty and falling business activity with priority being on risk reduction through prioritizing low-risk clients and protecting financial institutions through enhanced financing conditions and collateral. The research concludes that Tanzanian SMEs faced increased challenges in accessing financing during the pandemic due to economic uncertainty, reduced revenues, increased risk perception of SMEs by financial partners, inadequate and ineligible collateral and the lack of comprehensive support programmes to uniquely support SMEs over the course of the pandemic. Recommendations emphasize improved support from development partners and the government for SMEs and the financial institutions that support SMEs during crisis events to ensure a resilient SME sector. Future studies could expand by investigating sector-specific impacts and exploring quantitative approaches to measure the financing challenges of SMEs more broadly during crisis periods. 2026-01-28T13:11:48Z 2026-01-28T13:11:48Z 2025 2026-01-28T13:10:15Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MBA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42741 en eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle small and medium-sized enterprises
Tanzania
Covid-19
Tarimo, Asha
The challenges faced by small & medium sized enterprises (SMEs) in accessing credit in Tanzania: perspectives in the time of Covid-19
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The challenges faced by small & medium sized enterprises (SMEs) in accessing credit in Tanzania: perspectives in the time of Covid-19
title_full The challenges faced by small & medium sized enterprises (SMEs) in accessing credit in Tanzania: perspectives in the time of Covid-19
title_fullStr The challenges faced by small & medium sized enterprises (SMEs) in accessing credit in Tanzania: perspectives in the time of Covid-19
title_full_unstemmed The challenges faced by small & medium sized enterprises (SMEs) in accessing credit in Tanzania: perspectives in the time of Covid-19
title_short The challenges faced by small & medium sized enterprises (SMEs) in accessing credit in Tanzania: perspectives in the time of Covid-19
title_sort challenges faced by small amp medium sized enterprises smes in accessing credit in tanzania perspectives in the time of covid 19
topic small and medium-sized enterprises
Tanzania
Covid-19
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42741
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