TITLE:
Catalytic Capital and Indigenous Transition: Rethinking Grant Sustainability through SPENM’s G-L-E Model
AUTHORS:
Collins Ezeiruaku, Abel Eseoghene Owotemu, Ibironke Favour Olubamise, Rose Agbo
KEYWORDS:
Catalytic Capital, Grants, G → L → E, Blended Finance, MSME Resilience, Certification Funds, Business/Mission Model Canvas, Apprenticeship Model, Sustainability, Market Access, Post-Grant Transition, Nature-Positive Enterprises, Capacity Building
JOURNAL NAME:
Journal of Human Resource and Sustainability Studies,
Vol.14 No.1,
January
20,
2026
ABSTRACT: Traditional, short-term grant funding often creates a sustainability paradox: it achieves immediate outputs but fosters dependency and leaves development gains exposed when support ends. Recent reductions in Official Development Assistance (ODA) intensify this vulnerability and necessitate structural redesigns of grant instruments. This paper contends that grants should be restructured as catalytic capital—early-stage, risk-absorbing investments that deliberately de-risk ventures and catalyze follow-on market financing. Using the UNDP-GEF Small Grants Programme’s Support to Potential and Existing Nature-Positive MSMEs (SPENM) as an illustrative case, the paper develops and tests a three-layer Grants → Loans → Equity (G-L-E) transition model that sequences concessional grant support into concessional lending and ultimately into equity finance to enable durable, market-ready enterprises. The model is anchored to a Standards & Certification Support Fund (SCSF) that reduces information asymmetries and market-entry costs for small producers, and by using the Mission Model Canvas (MMC) capacity-building tool that translates social and environmental outcomes into investor-relevant value propositions. The analysis also draws on the Igbo Apprenticeship Model (IAM)—to surface design principles (skills-for-capital sequencing, social collateral, staged disbursement tied to competency, and layered risk absorption) that facilitate post-grant financial independence and enterprise resilience. The study finds that catalytic grants significantly improve the bankability of nature-positive MSMEs when paired with nonfinancial enablers—coaching, mentorship, and business refinement—which are decisive in converting grants into repayable finance; strong gender mainstreaming (50%+ women) and enhanced market visibility (400 directory onboardings) further indicate fertile ground for embedding indigenous transition mechanisms. Policy recommendations also propose that funders should prioritize catalytic instruments that bundle verification, aggregation, and mentorship; nature-positive MSMEs should adopt operational sustainability mechanisms and actively leverage mentorship and market linkages to reach bankability thresholds; and policymakers should codify indigenous design principles into G → L → E sequencing frameworks to improve graduation rates from grants to loans and then equity.