By Billy Mijungu
The State Department for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises has steadily emerged as one of the most delivery focused pillars of the Bottom Up Economic Transformation Agenda. Under the leadership of Principal Secretary Susan Mang’eni, the department has moved beyond policy articulation to build a practical, functioning system that deliberately brings Kenyans into the economy, builds their capacity, supports enterprise growth, and enables sustainable scale.
At the foundation of this transformation is the Financial Inclusion Programme implemented through the Hustler Fund. The Fund has been stabilised and repositioned as a structured graduation pathway rather than a short term credit intervention. Millions of micro traders previously excluded from formal finance have accessed affordable credit, built digital credit histories, adopted a culture of saving, and demonstrated repayment discipline. The clear progression from individual borrowing to group, enterprise, and SME level financing has laid a durable base for long term business growth.
Capacity building has been strengthened through the Kenya Institute of Business Training, which has expanded access to practical entrepreneurship training, financial literacy, bookkeeping, and enterprise management skills. By focusing on market relevant and hands on learning for MSMEs, youth, women, and artisans, KIBT has improved enterprise survival rates, productivity, and business decision making across counties.
Formalisation and enterprise development have been driven by the Micro and Small Enterprises Authority. Through incubation centres, common manufacturing facilities, and sustained county level engagement, MSEA has supported MSMEs to transition from informality into compliant, structured, and market ready businesses. This has strengthened productivity, regulatory compliance, and competitiveness while creating a clear bridge between informal trade and the formal economy.
Inclusive empowerment financing has continued through the Uwezo Fund, which supports youth, women, and persons with disabilities using group based lending linked to training and mentorship. This integrated approach has strengthened grassroots income generation while deepening financial inclusion for historically marginalised groups.
For enterprises ready to move into production and scale, the Kenya Industrial Estate has played a critical role by providing affordable industrial credit, factory space, machinery, and technical support. This has enabled MSMEs to transition from trading into light manufacturing, strengthening local value addition, job creation, and participation in national and regional supply chains.
A major accelerator within this ecosystem is the NYOTA Programme, a youth focused initiative that combines grants, training, mentorship, and market linkages. The programme is on track to empower over 100,000 vulnerable youth across all 1,450 wards. Following nationwide classroom training, the first business start up capital disbursement reached over 12,000 beneficiaries in the Western region.
A second phase covering 27 counties is now underway, with close to 50,000 youth receiving structured grants linked to savings, mentorship, and a second phase of business development support. Subsequent phases will complete national coverage.
Across all these institutions, PS Susan Mang’eni has emphasised coordination, data driven planning, and disciplined execution. The result is a coherent MSME growth ladder that connects financial inclusion, skills development, formalisation, inclusive financing, industrial scaling, and youth enterprise support. In a sector that employs the majority of Kenyans, this approach demonstrates that bottom up growth is not a slogan, but a system deliberately built and consistently delivered.



