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The Role of Microfinance
in Rural Microenterprise Development:
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Results of an internet-based discussion forum: Based on
an analysis by Prof. Hans Dieter Seibel, University of Cologne
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What Would it Take to Foster Sustainable Access to Microfinance
in Rural Areas?
The issue of interventions with the objective
of building sustainable access to microfinance in rural areas
has been taken up in the SFD in a comprehensive and systematic
manner and put into the perspective of what matters in rural and microfinance.
1. First of all: client experience matters
Clients have experienced in donor projects that credit can
make them poorer or richer:
– Starting with large loans and term finance, as has been
common among donor-supported AgDBs, is a guarantee for failure.
– Only small short-term loans allow them to experiment
with investments at a reasonable risk; to test their ability
to borrow, invest, repay and save; to change to more profitable
investments as opportunities emerge; and to grow rapidly with
growing internal and external resources.
– Once they are successful, they need a banking partner
which responds to their increasing financial needs. This allows
them not only to move beyond the poverty threshold, but also
to create employment for the poor.
2. What matters
in terms of origin, history and culture of rural and microfinance
Poverty matters: Poverty has been at the cradle of rural and
microfinance:
– The poor need financial services, savings more than
credit
Informal finance matters: Informal financial institutions in various
forms of ownership have been based, some for centuries, on the
very principles that many credit NGOs find difficult to adopt:
self-reliance, viability, outreach to the poor as owners or users,
competition, marketdriven innovations, demand-oriented financial
products and appropriate risk management.
– Upgrading and mainstreaming through networking, driven
by incentives, is one of many ways in which donors can support
expansion of outreach and financial deepening of informal financial
institutions History matters: MFIs in Ireland, 1720-1950, have
demonstrated how regulation makes and brakes savings-driven RMF.
MFIs in Germany, 1778-2002, started from informal beginnings and
evolved, through appropriate regulation and supervision, to cooperative
banks and savings banks (Sparkassen) with outreach to the majority
of the German population in rural and urban areas, accounting
for 51% of all banking assets.
Among the lessons are:
– Microfinance is not a poor solution for poor countries
– Savings-driven microfinance institutions, in cooperative
or community ownership, are equally feasible in rural and urban
areas
– If properly regulated and supervised, they have great
potential in poverty alleviation and development, both in rural
and urban areas Crisis matters: Financial innovations typically
emerge as a response to crisis, which must be taken as a positive
force:
– Learning from experience means: responding to crisis
with innovations
– Many MFIs in crisis are kept alive, and prevented from
reform, through donor support
– MFIs which fail to respond to crises constructively
must be allowed to falter: close them or reform them! Development
matters: Microfinance is no panacea. It contributes to development,
but requires a climate of broader development to be fully effective,
both macroeconomically and at the local level:– Agricultural
and agrobusiness, land, trade, monetary, foreign exchange, educational
and numerous other policies matter in generating a development
climate in which microfinance can play its role
– The effectiveness of finance depends upon profitable
enterprise and marketing to really make a difference
– Targeting the poor only and excluding the nonpoor prevents
the development of a village economy, diminishing the chances
of employment, self-employment and economic growth of the poor
– Donors must respect the autonomy of RMFIs and refrain
from imposing targeting Culture matters: The enthusiasm over
the new consensus in RMF has led to a neglect of cultural factors,
which may be of crucial importance to the clients and corporate
culture. E.g. a culturally sensitive approach may arrive at
two fundamentally different approaches to development:
– Development from above, through the established authorities,
is more effective in hierarchical or closed societies, which
are oriented towards status, tradition and the preservation
of stability
– Development from below, through participatory processes,
is more effective in segmentary or open societies, which are
oriented towards competition, experimentation, individual achievement
and social change
3. What matters
at the level of financial systems
Financial systems matter: Well functioning financial systems
must be in place if sustainable development and poverty alleviation
are to occur. Governments and donors have to realise that financial
systems and functioning networks of MFIs evolve over long periods
of time:
– Donors can contribute to that evolution, but only in
a long-range perspective
– And in a coordinated goal-oriented manner Capital matters:
The main functions of capital transfer from abroad should be:
– Bridging temporary shortages in loan capital through
credit lines
– Investing in deposit-taking institutions, providing
leverage for savings mobilisation
– Strengthening the capacity of RMFIs to generate their
own resources: savings and retained earnings
– Shifting the emphasis from aid to investors (e.g., in
Emerging Market Funds), encouraging thereby private entrepreneurship
on both sides of the economic divide but capital transfer has
undermined rural finance and development: Reliance on external
resources, interest rate subsidisation and outside administrative
control led to misallocation of scarce resources, corruption
and external debts not matched by productivity increases.
– Under disbursement pressure, donors continue to provide
credit lines in substitution of domestic savings, undermining
the growth of self-reliant financial institutions Savings matter:
at three levels, provided inflation is low and does not erode
the value of the savings of the poor:
– As a service to the poor, to deposit and accumulate
their savings in a safe place – As a source of loanable
funds and self-reliance for (rural) financial institutions
– As the main source of domestic capital in the national
economy
Savings and credit matter: which one comes first depends on
the rate of return:
– Savings-first for subsistence and low-yielding activities
– Credit-first for high-yielding activities Financial
intermediation matters: Institutions, which offer both savings
and credit services benefit twofold:
– They generate their loanable funds on a sustainable
basis at a low cost
– They benefit from economies of scope; ie, the additional
transaction costs of the second type of service are substantially
lower than those of the first. Financial sector policy matters:
The two main instruments of financial sector policy are:
– Interest rate deregulation, with interest rate autonomy
on deposits and loans
– Institutional deregulation, to freely establish financial
institutions and branches The legal framework matters: Appropriate
legal forms allow people to establish their own financial institutions
in private, cooperative or community ownership:
– Donors should support the financial authorities in providing
an appropriate framework
– The two most important legal forms are privately owned
rural banks and financial cooperatives Interest rates matter:
Interest rates are of crucial importance:
– Caps on interest rates cut down on viability and outreach,
rob savers and investors of the value of their resources, and
ruin MFIs
– Interest rates above the inflation rate on deposits
prevent the erosion of capital – Rural market rates of
interest must vary widely between institutions and countries,
reflecting cost of funds, risks and services
– High interest rates force the borrower into investments
with high returns
– Bringing down interest rates is an internal matter within
institutions Institutions matter (projects don’t): Institutions
are the social capital of a society, providing continuity and
efficiency.
Financial institutions fall into three sectors:
– The formal financial sector, which is regulated and
supervised by financial authorities
– The semiformal financial sector of institutions officially
recognised but not regulated
– The informal financial sector of institutions which
are regulated through local norms and traditional law, but are
not officially recognised nor regulated by the state.
Donors may:
– Support a differentiated financial infrastructure with
competitive institutions organised in networks
– Support the expansion of sustainable rural financial
institutions and their outreach
– Provide opportunities and incentives for upgrading nonformal
to formal institutions
– Abstain from perverse incentives which enable NGOs,
AgDBs and others to maintain unviable operations Competition
matters: An emphasis on the creation of a competitive environment
entails:
– Institutional diversity (eg, financial cooperatives,
rural banks, AgDB branches)
– Pressure to perform, through effective supervision and
enforcement of standards
– Procedures of bankruptcy for non-performing institutions
Prudential regulation matters: Regulation has failed in many
developing countries, but is a prerequisite for financial market
development.
There are two controversial positions:
– Regulating deposit-taking MFIs only
– Regulating all MFIs, stabilising the system and
protecting small investors Effective supervision matters: Regulation
is ineffective if not enforced by supervision.
Donors should strengthen:
– The political will and institutional capacity to enforce
standards of performance
– The restructuring or closing of nonperforming financial
institutions, instead of preventing it through bail-outs bankruptcy
matters!
– Bank superintendencies or central banks and, under delegated
supervision, networks and auditing apexes of rural banks, savings
and credit co-operatives, and other RMFIs.
Linkages matter: Through linkages with self-help groups or
MFIs, commercial banks may provide the following services:
– Safe-keeping of deposits in a regulated and
supervised institution
– Access to bank credit; channelling donor funds
– Liquidity balancing
– Equity participation
– Money transfer, check clearing, payments
– Capacity building
– Monitoring
Knowledge matters: The wealth of highly diverse institutional
experience has largely escaped knowledge management: at the
level of donor organisations, countries and regions:
– Donors will have to take up the challenge of establishing
a system of knowledge management.
4. What matters at the
level of institutions
Institutional reform matters: There are strikings examples
of successful reforms among different types of institutions,
leaving no excuse for continual support to unviable institutions.
The following lessons can be drawn:
– Financial sector policies such as deregulation of interest
rates and the provision of legal forms for regulated financial
institutions are conducive to financial innovations.
– Any type of financial institution can be reformed, including
credit NGOs and AgDBs.
– With attractive savings and credit products, appropriate
staff incentives, and an effective system of internal control,
rural microfinance can be profitable.
– The poor can save; rural financial institutions can
mobilise savings cost-effectively.
– If financial services are offered without a credit bias,
demand for savings deposit services exceeds the demand for credit
by a wide margin.
– Incentives for timely repayment work.
– Outreach to vast numbers of low-income people and sustainability
are compatible.
– Transaction costs can be lowered, profitability and
outreach to the poor increased, by including the non-poor and
their demands for widely differing deposit and loan sizes Agricultural
development banks matter:
– AgDBs are the largest providers of RMF services.
– Unreformed AgDBs waste public resources, lack growth
and outreach, undermine rural finance.
– Reform may lead to sustainable outreach to all segments
of the rural population through retail or wholesale services
(linkages)
Donors may support:
– Regional reform policy seminars with financial authorities.
– AgDB reform workshops.
– Regular state-of-the-art reporting on AgDB reform Ownership
matters: Credit NGOs lack ownership; private ownership is most
effective, but:
– Depending on culture, institutions can be sustainable
and reach the poor under any type of ownership.
– Individual or cooperative ownership by the poor as shareholders
of MFIs, including transformed NGOs, deserve special support.
Institutional autonomy matters: Management autonomy is more
important than ownership.
Donors should:
– Insist on management autonomy (vis-à-vis government
and donor agencies)
– Refrain from targeting
– Respect management autonomy in customer selection and
loan decisions Viability, efficiency, sustainability and self-reliance
matter: Donors should support the enhancement of:
– The mobilisation of domestic resources, such as savings,
equity and borrowings
– Profitability, requiring adequate repayment and coverage
of all costs from the margin
– Cost-effective microfinance products and services
– An adequate regulatory framework
Outreach matters – and so does truth in reporting: In
contrast to a ubiquitous credit bias of donors and governments,
both saver and borrower outreach matter, in both small and large
institutions:
– Support both saver and borrower outreach.
– Insist on the reporting of actual, not cumulative figures;
the latter conceal the truth Outreach and sustainability matter
– together!
There is strong evidence of the compatibility of outreach and
sustainability, except under conditions of fixed interest rates:
– Insist on mutually reinforcing growth of sustainability and outreach.
– Insist on adequate interest rates, allowing for profits
above the inflation rate Sustainable outreach to marginal rural
areas requires recognition of, and support for:
– The primacy of savings and self-financing, due to the
absence of markets.
– Member-owned SHGs and cooperatives, operating at low costs.
MFI portfolio diversification matters as a risk management strategy:
– Support portfolio diversification of both clients and
MFIs.
– Abstain from imposing loan purposes, which create undue
risks
Lending technology matters – and should not be influenced
by ideology:
– The poor can be reached by either individual or group
technologies, if properly applied.
– Group technologies with joint liability are more effective
for small loans to the very poor.
– Individual technologies offer opportunities for graduating
to larger loans and sustainable movements out of poverty Innovation
and flexibility matter: Rigid replication of success stories is a recipe for failure.
– Support financial innovations and adjustments to local
culture.
5. What matters
at the operational level
Good practices matter (not best practices):
The term best practices evokes notions of optimal solutions
and leads to inappropriate replications:
– Support satisfactory culturally appropriate solutions
Institutional size matters, but not absolutely:
RMFIs benefit from economies of scale, but there is no best
practice in terms of size.
– Support both, small numbers of large, and large numbers
of small, institutions; there is no minimum size of sustainable
institutions (such as SHGs or cooperatives)
Profits matter:
Profits are a source of capital and a major determinant of growth of outreach.
– Support studies of profitability of different credit
and savings products
– Support organisational efficiency, bringing down interest
rates or increasing profits
Incentives matter: While profits are a source of incentive payments,
incentives are at the same time a major determinant of profits.
Donors may support:
– The transformation of branches into profit centers
– The introduction of systems of staff performance incentives
– Client incentives (rather than penalties) for timely
repayment
Repayment matters:
There are many institutions of different types with repayment
rates near 100%; however, enforcing perfect repayment may not
be costeffective and may even curtail outreach.
Donors may support measures to attain adequate repayment based
on:
– Appropriate terms like size, instalments, grace periods,
purpose, timely disbursement
– Sound practices of loan enforcement, insisting on timely
repayment
Information matters – in terms of computerised data and
personal knowledge of clients.
– Support adequate Management Information Systems that
provide timely information
Delivery systems matter: Institutions lower transaction costs;
therefore:
– Support measures to bring the bank of MFI to the people,
shifting transaction costs from clients to institutions, with
cost coverage from the interest rate margin Financial products
matter:
– Support the development of demand-oriented and cost-effective
savings and credit products
– Support efficient collection services (e.g., at doorsteps)
Loan protection matters: Life (health, cattle) insurance is
a service to clients, but also part of loan protection.
– Support the development of cost-effective insurance
services by MFI, particularly to cover the default risks arising
from AIDS/HIV
6. What matters
to the poor
Access to savings and credit matters –
(far more than interest rates):
– Support institutions which offer both savings and credit.
– Insist on the transformation of credit NGOs into institutions
collecting voluntary savings.
Rural enterprise viability matters:
The viability of RMFIs and rural farm and nonfarm enterprises
are mutually reinforcing.
– Promote linkages with agencies providing BDS in rural
areas and to enterprising poor.
Household portfolio diversification matters:
Income-generating activities of poor households are usually
highly diversified, managing the risks of diverse enterprises.
– Refrain from restricting small loans to single (productive) purposes.
– Encourage loans to Income-Generating Activities (IGA) with high rates of return, including petty trading.
– Stay away from financing group enterprises.
– They have usually failed The poor themselves matter…and
so do the non-poor: Depending on culture and the financial infrastructure.
Banking with both the poor and non-poor may increase outreach
to the poor. In exploitative cultures, the poor may prefer access
to financial services as a separate group.
– Promote financial services to the poor and non-poor
in separate or mixed MFIs depending on culture.
– Instead of targeting, promote financial products for
different market segments Culture of labour division matters:
Depending on culture, men, women and RMFIs may opt for separate
or mixed institutions.
– Refrain from targeting women.
– Respect the autonomy of women and men and let them decide
on separate vs. mixed institutions Autonomy matters:
– Abstain from targeting and other impositions.
– Respect the autonomy of the poor, women, local financial
institutions and their owners.
– Support self-selection through particular financial
products and services.
7. Donor policy and coordination matter
7.1 Transmitting policy to operational departments
There is an emerging consensus on RMF policy in the community
of donors and microfinance practitioners. But transmitting policy to operational departments remains a major challenge:
– Examine the feasibility of a matrix structure, with operational
responsibility in the operational units and responsibility for
project design and performance in the financial sector & microfinance unit
– Create a mechanism for monitoring the effective implementation
of policy
7.2 Cooperation, coordination and co-financing
The effectiveness of development assistance private sector cooperation
can be infinitely increased through coordination:
– Synergies are created by stakeholder coordination at the
national level, including cooperation in expert advice, policy
dialogue and project supervision
– Bilateral technical assistance agencies can complement
multilateral and bilateral financial assistance agencies with
grant-financed expertise
– Private sector brings market orientation and business
discipline
– Standardised reporting on MFIs will facilitate implementation
of policy and donor coordination.
7.3 Opening markets
The total effect of development assistance is small compared to
the importance of opening markets in the developed countries for
products from developing countries:
– Donors should make every effort for abolishing agricultural
subsidies and opening up markets for developing countries
8. Conclusions
(1) Sustainable development requires:
– Continued growth and diversification of the rural economy
– Access of all segments of the population including rural
micro-entrepreneurs, farmers and the poor to sustainable financial
services such as savings, credit and insurance
– Provided by self-reliant, sustainable financial institutions
– In a conducive macroeconomic policy environment
(2) Sustainable rural microfinance requires local initiative
and careful donor support for the development of institutions,
enabling them to:
– Offer both savings and credit services
– Mobilise their own resources
– Have their loans repaid
– Cover their costs from their operational income
– Finance their expansion to the poor and nonpoor from
their profits
(3) Governments, with careful donor assistance, have to provide:
– A conducive policy framework with deregulated interested
rates
– An appropriate legal framework for competitive local
and national financial institutions in private, cooperative,
community and public ownership
– A system of prudential regulation and effective direct
or delegated supervision
(4) Donors may contribute to the development of rural financial
systems through:
– Experts for RMF units in central banks, RMF networks
and leading RMFIs
– Capacity building in financial authorities, RMFI networks
and RMFIs
– Policy dialogue
– Equity investments, clear ownership and an exit option
– Credit lines for bridging temporary liquidity gaps (no
credit lines for other purposes!)
– Assistance for the transformation of MFIs into regulated
bank or non-bank institutions
– Assistance for the promotion of ownership of financial
institutions by the poor
– Making good use of the comparative advantages of multilateral
and bilateral donors
(5) Supporting self-help groups in marginal areas through:
– NGOs helping to identify and promote existing, or establish
new, SHGs as local financial intermediaries
– Networks or federations of SHGs
– Linkages of SHGs with regulated financial institutions
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