Leading MSME associations unite to champion policy reform, expand opportunities for Jamaican enterprises

Jamaica’s micro, small, and medium-sized enterprise (MSME) sector is entering a new era of collective advocacy, as three of the country’s leading business representative organizations have announced a landmark collaborative agreement to advance a shared policy agenda focused on inclusive national economic expansion and development. The partnership brings together the Small Business Association of Jamaica (SBAJ), the Young Entrepreneurs Association of Jamaica (YEA), and the MSME Alliance, in a move that insiders frame as a transformative shift away from fragmented industry engagement toward a cohesive, results-centered strategy.

In an official joint press statement announcing the alliance, the organizations framed the agreement as a critical step forward in strengthening Jamaica’s overall MSME ecosystem, which serves as a foundational pillar of the country’s domestic economy. The unified framework follows months of strategic high-level deliberations among leadership from all three groups, and codifies a shared commitment to building a more structured, impact-focused approach to both policy advocacy and on-the-ground implementation.

Garnett Reid, President of the Small Business Association of Jamaica, emphasized that collective action dramatically amplifies the MSME sector’s voice in policy conversations, boosting the community’s ability to push for practical, outcome-focused solutions to the challenges holding small businesses back. Reid specifically highlighted access to affordable capital and greater participation in government public procurement opportunities as top priorities that will benefit from the unified approach.

Per the joint statement, the collaborative policy agenda will center on three core priority areas: advancing comprehensive reform of Jamaica’s public procurement system to open more opportunities for small businesses, expanding access to domestic and international trade opportunities for MSMEs, and removing barriers to expand affordable financing options for emerging and established small and medium-sized enterprises.

Cordell Williams, President of the Young Entrepreneurs Association of Jamaica, noted that the partnership marks a deliberate shift toward more intentional, high-impact MSME advocacy. By pooling their unique insights, networks, and on-the-ground experience, Williams explained, the three organizations are far better positioned to craft solutions that directly address the real, everyday challenges faced by Jamaican entrepreneurs at all stages of growth.

Antoinette Hamilton, President of the MSME Alliance, added that this level of cross-organization alignment creates a far stronger, more coordinated platform for engaging with public and private sector stakeholders. A unified voice, she said, paves the way for more productive dialogue and clearer pathways to address the systemic structural barriers that have long limited growth for Jamaican MSMEs.

Unlike many collaborative initiatives that launch as standalone new entities, this partnership will operate as a rotating co-convened mechanism, with no formal name and no single organization or leader holding dominant control. The three founding associations will hold joint monthly coordination meetings, with invitations extended to additional stakeholders on an as-needed basis to address specific priority workstreams.

Governance of the initiative will be led by a Steering Committee, which includes the president of each member association (or their designated representative), the immediate past president of each group (or their nominee), and one additional appointed representative from each organization. To guarantee equal ownership and balanced decision-making, every member organization holds exactly one vote on all strategic matters.

To support high-level engagement and strategic alignment across all stakeholder groups, prominent Jamaican businessman Kevin Frith has been tapped to serve as the initiative’s Strategic Partner. In this role, Frith will lead outreach and coordination with the Jamaican government, national private sector leadership, international development partners, and the Jamaican diaspora, working to maintain momentum across all priority policy areas. Frith emphasized that sustainable, meaningful progress for the sector depends on bridging divides between stakeholder groups, aligning national and international economic priorities, and turning collaborative dialogue into tangible, on-the-ground results that lift up entrepreneurs and grow the overall Jamaican economy.

The partnership has also established strict clear communication protocols to preserve the integrity of the collective voice: all public and official external engagement must be undertaken jointly, with no single organization or independent representative speaking on behalf of the group to media or government stakeholders. This rule ensures a consistent, unified message across all advocacy efforts.

The initial agreement for the collaborative framework will run for one year, and is formalized through a signed Memorandum of Understanding that outlines all governance, communication, and decision-making rules. For Jamaica’s MSME community, the unified approach marks the opening of a new chapter in industry representation, one centered on shared purpose, strategic alignment, and measurable impact, with the ultimate goal of building a far more supportive, enabling environment for entrepreneurs across every region of the country.