The Hidden Cost of “Not Yet”: A True Story About Delays, Lost Time, and the Quiet Tax on Everyone

A conversation I can’t forgetLast week, a friend called me—voice low, words careful. He had just won a legitimate LPO from a reputable organization. The goods were ready to be sourced, the beneficiaries were waiting, and he did what any disciplined supplier would do: he approached his bank for short-term LPO financing.

Why the bank declined?

Not because he lacked collateral. Not because the order was risky. Not even because the organization lacked funds.They declined because the buyer is known for paying very, very late—not “a few weeks past 30 days,” but “try 90+ if you’re blessed.” The credit officer said something to my friend that stuck with me:“We’d be happy to finance once your client improves their internal processes and payment reputation.”That sentence is a mirror organizations don’t often get to see. It’s feedback they may never hear—or only hear after the damage is done. In this case, the bank’s decision created a cliff-edge: if my friend can’t finance the LPO, he can’t deliver. And if he can’t deliver, the buyer must re-issue the order to someone else.Let’s count the time lost—because time is the most expensive line item nobody budgets for

The stopwatch nobody started (but everyone pays for)

Now zoom one level out -The spiral impact (in real life, not policy slides)

  • Beneficiaries wait longer. A clinic without replenished PPE or a school without learning materials isn’t just a procurement “variance”—it’s a real person’s delay in getting a life-changing service.

  • Programs slip timelines. Field teams re-sequence activities, burn contingency budgets, and lose momentum.

  • Finance pays more later. Urgent replacements invite “rush” pricing. New vendors price in risk or simply drop out next time.

  • Reputation erodes. Suppliers talk to each other (and their bankers). A slow payer is quietly deprioritized or priced higher.

And here’s the irony: none of this is because money wasn’t there. It’s because internal processes were weak—approvals stuck behind someone’s leave calendar, receipting delayed by an ERP hiccup, verification waiting for a field return, or just… someone sitting on the work.

Late payments aren’t just about cash—they’re about confidence

In Uganda (and across Africa and beyond), most suppliers rely on LPO financing. Banks and micro-financiers don’t just review the supplier; they profile the buyer. A buyer known for honoring 30 days? Financing is routine and priced fairly. A buyer known for “eventually paying”? Financing becomes costly or unavailable.
Here’s the math my friend was staring at:LPO value: UGX 100,000,000Expected payment terms: Net 30Short-term facility cost: ~2.5% per monthAt 30 days: financing cost ≈ UGX 2,500,000 (planned)At 90 days: financing cost ≈ UGX 7,500,000 (unplanned)Margin erosion: an extra UGX 5,000,000 quietly disappearsWhen margins collapse due to approval drag, lenders get nervous, suppliers pull back, and the buyer’s vendor pool shrinks. Next tender? Fewer bids. Higher prices. Lower resilience. We call it “market dynamics.” It’s actually trust dynamics.

But we procured after confirming funds—why the delay?

Even when money is already secured, payments stall because process—not cash—is the bottleneck. The same frictions that sank my friend’s LPO financing show up inside the buyer: approvals queued in serial instead of parallel, no delegated authority when someone’s on leave, unclear “Day 0” for what counts as a complete invoice, ERP hiccups that delay GRN/GRV entries, and evidence anxiety where teams hesitate to sign off until a “perfect” bundle appears. Each feels minor; together they become a quiet tax on everyone.

Those internal delays directly reinforce the late-payer reputation flagged by lenders. Suppliers price in risk, margins erode under extra interest, and credible vendors step back—exactly the spiral we saw when the bank declined to finance my friend’s order. The consequence isn’t abstract: beneficiaries wait longer, programs slip, and the organization eventually pays more through rush premiums and weaker competition. In short, the delay isn’t about funding; it’s about workflow design and discipline—and fixing it is the shortest path back to trust, value for money, and timely impact

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