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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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Who are the Rural Entrepreneurs:
Who are rural entrepreneurs, asks one of the
contributors to the SFD, family producers who don’t pay for
wages and use mostly their own work force? Medium and large
producers with lot a workers? Much depends on the local development
situation. According to the contributors to the SFD, there are
at least three different subsegments of the market where private
and governmental agencies may intervene in various ways: (i)
the rural poor, particularly in disadvantaged countries or marginal
areas; (ii) all segments of the rural population in more open
economies, particularly non-agricultural entrepreneurs in a
situation of increasing diversification; and (iii) commodity
producers, processors and traders, with a tremendous growth
potential if the potential for value-added is fully mobilised.
Rural entrepreneurs in stagnating countries
From the perspective of poor countries like Ethiopia, rural entrepreneurs
are the rural poor. The communication system, particularly the
road network, makes access to financial services difficult. Where
access is available, as in the case of the Amhara Credit & Savings
Institution (ACSI), one of several large MFIs, clients’ low skills
and business abilities reportedly weaken their absorptive capacity.
Many are found risk averse, or for cultural reasons don’t like
to venture into non-traditional activities, while others have
a low income perspective and simply don’t have the demand for
incomeimproving services. Such problems reportedly manifest themselves
more profoundly in women, whose access is further limited because
of problems emanating from a male dominated social order; yet
the situation of women in microfinance is more differentiated,
as will be shown below.
Rural entrepreneurs in more progressive countries
A different part of the rural enterprise spectrum is covered by
contributors from countries with a more open rural economy. Here
it is argued that microfinance is important to rural entrepreneurs
for agriculture, but under conditions of increasing diversification
even more so for non-agricultural enterprises. Microfinance thus
comprises all segments of the rural population.In fact non-agricultural
activities often complement agricultural income and labour flows
and hence help build livelihood stability and growth. It is further
argued that rural financial services actually become much better
if we take the micro-specificity away and concentrate on sustainable
financial services to a wider array of rural households and businesses.
This increases institutional viability, reduces unit costs for
services to the poorest and helps finance not only other poor
but other important rural actors including – truckers, agribusinesses,
side businesses, etc. all of which have an important role to play
in rural development.
Rural entrepreneurs in commodity production and trade
Yet, the importance of non-agricultural activities
not withstanding, commodity production, processing and trade
continue to be the backbone of the rural world in many developing
countries. The commodity sector provides subsistence food, income,
employment and opportunities for growth and development.
One contributor reports that, “all the
microeconomic data collected over the last 40 years in Nicaragua
demonstrates that small land holders, family producers are more
productive and more competitive than large and medium producers.”
From the US it is being reported that agriculture, in myriad
forms of property, acts as an engine for economic growth. Eg,
crops increasingly become the basis for products other than
food or feed (eg, fibres and fuels), and as research expands
opportunities for value-added innovations increase; this in
turn increases employment.
There are two sides in the financing of the
commodity sector:
(i) the demand side, with strategies for processors,
producers and traders; and
(ii) the supply side, with strategies for
financial institutions. Closing the supply and demand gap is
a daunting task, but not impossible.
Two issues are crucial in combating poverty in a sustainable
way:
(i) on the demand side, a move is necessary
from a sole emphasis on commodity production towards value creation
through processing and marketing goods that respond to market
pull;
(ii) on the supply side, there has to be a
shift away from charity and interest rate subsidies towards
dynamically growing and sustainable financial services at commercial
terms.
From this perspective, the challenge is how
to turn effective (ie, creditworthy) demand for financial services
into effective supply of financial services. The two sides have
sometimes contradictory, but mostly complementary, though not
identical interests. These are not two different worlds, but
two sides of the same world: they can only grow together or
fall together. Each contributes to the other’s growth
or failure: viable financial institutions provide financial
services to producers, processors and traders, thereby contributing
to their viability and growth; viable producers, processors
and traders contribute to the viability and growth of financial
institutions. Viability is crucial.
Short-term benefits of small entrepreneurs
– gained, e.g., by running away with a loan – are
of little benefit to them if this is the last loan they received.
Squeezing collateral out of a small entrepreneur who cannot
repay a loan is of little benefit to an MFI as this will be
the last loan given to that customer. Sustainability is crucial:
of producers, processors and traders on the one hand and of
MFIs on the other hand. A few high-quality loans to a few first-rate
producers, processors and traders do little good: be it to the
commodity sector or to the MF sector. Outreach is crucial.
Rural agro-processing:
A broad spectrum of topics that can shape
a strategy for rural enterprise development were discussed.
Several examples of the potential and needs of rural agro-processing
were presented
in the SFD: cassava, leather, and preserved and processed fruits
and vegetables. In the past few decades, particularly during
the heyday of agricultural credit, there has been a sole emphasis
on production, regardless of costs, comparative advantage and
opportunity.
This has changed fundamentally. It is now
realised that the viability and profitability of rural enterprise
and rural microfinance institutions are intimately linked and
mutually reinforcing in a virtuous circle. Profitability matters,
not production. Of crucial importance are value-addition and
quality at every link of the commodity chain to respond to strong
market demand from rural and/or urban areas. There is a huge
underutilised potential here.
In Ghana, as in numerous other countries, cassava
processing offers highly profitable, diversified opportunities
for production, processing, trade and investment. Eighty percent
of farmers produce cassava, amounting to 10 million tonnes,
which accounts for 22% of agricultural income and supplies 25%
of calories consumed.
The International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) in
Nigeria exhibits 32 cassava products; very few of them are found
on local markets, commercialisation being the bottleneck. In
this situation, Feed & Flour (Ghana) Ltd. (FFGL) propose
to set up a plant for the processing and marketing of high quality
cassava flour, based on a modification of the gari-making process
developed by IITA. Facing an estimated annual demand around
144,000 tonnes, there seems to be a good potential for a joint
investment by local and external investors.
Quality matters
Quality is of crucial importance. Quality
(together with standardisation and packaging) is crucial throughout
the commodity chain and in the process of adding value. Each
commodity has its own range of opportunities for adding value
and improving quality. In the case of meat, hides, leather,
this starts with the quality of livestock and its veterinary
care, which has a bearing on the post-processing of meat and
leather. The major needs are training of producers in clean
production and processing, quality awareness and quality management,
capacitybuilding, access to finance, accurate information, and
essential utilities and services.
For a substantial improvement in the processing
and marketing of leather, better cooperation between private
producers, producer associations, commercial institutions, government
agencies and donors is required. Another example are perishable
fruits and vegetables. Depending on seasonal and regional variation,
many developing countries produce an excess of tomatoes, yet
import large quantities of tomato concentrate. There may also
be a seasonal abundance of fruit like mangoes, much of which,
in the absence of processing facilities, is lost. The drying
and processing of fruits and vegetables would offer solutions
to these problems. The preservation and processing of fruits
and vegetables adds value, generates employment and improves
diet.
Key issues are: Is processing worthwhile?
And can farmers supply the material on a regular basis? Can
economies of scale be achieved? Value creation requires the
planning of diversified processing of several fruits and vegetables
over the year to maximise plant utilisation; intermediate-scale
processing through contract farming and the pooling of producers;
the use of locally available raw materials and appropriate technologies
to minimise capital expenditure and, at the same time, maximise
product quality.
Success factors are adequate training, the
quality of raw material, and market analysis. The history of
financing is full of failures. The sector needs experienced
micro-entrepreneurs
linked to farmers who are willing and able to grow fruits and
vegetables, thereby guaranteeing:
– A steady source of supply
– Appropriate risk management, such as spreading
production over several fruits and vegetables
– Good linkages between producers and processors
– Financial engineering comprising savings mobilisation
as a basis for self-financing
– The provision of investment capital
– A balancing of individual and group lending
technologies
– A legal framework for sanctions against defaulters
Strategies for financial institutions:
Focus must be on sustainable financial institutions
with sustainable financial services, combining credit with savings
as a service to customers and as a source of loanable funds,
thus moving away from credit-only provided through projects
and programmes. Any MFI, bank or microbank striving for sustainability
must: mobilise their own resources, apply appropriate lending
technologies, provide attractive loan products with appropriate
interest rates, have their loans repaid, manage their risks,
make a profit, finance the growth of outreach from the growth
of savings and profits, and through advocacy strive for a conducive
policy and legal environment.
Evidence to the contrary in the old world
of development finance notwithstanding, sustainable MFIs, microbanks
and AgDBs in the new world of development finance, with appropriate
risk management technologies, have demonstrated their ability
to lend to the agricultural sector including producers, processors
and traders at low default rates and high profits. The number
of
such institutions has substantially increased in recent years:
in all ownership categories, including government-owned banks,
private and community-based rural banks, and various types of
MFIs. Networks and associations of MFIs and banks have a crucial
role to play in disseminating the positive experience and developing
support strategies in cooperation with government and donor
agencies.
Experience in several countries has shown
that the informal financial sector is quite able to cater for
small-scale financial needs, but not for larger loans; that
rapid access to finance is more important to borrowers than
cost; and that agricultural banks, as in Thailand and Bangladesh,
are able to successfully diversify their portfolio by combining
loans to both agricultural producers and non-agricultural small
enterprises and processors.
Business development services (BDS):
BDS are of crucial importance to small and
micro enterprises in various sectors of the economy, linking
the strategies of producers, processors and traders with those
of financial institutions. As reported in the SFD, to date more
is to be
learned from error than trial. Not only have many heavily funded
BDS programmes broken down; it is being argued that it is the
very fact of donor support which has undermined the market for
BDS. Just as subsidised interest rates have undermined financial
markets, so has donor support undermined the viability of
BDS. This, however, can be turned around, as the experience
with CEFE (Competency-based Economies through Formation of Enterprise)
shows.
Provision of BDS as a private good CEFE is a medium,
small and micro enterprise development training concept and
was developed in 1979 by GTZ, the German Technical Cooperation
Agency. It is an action-oriented adult training tool, applied
in numerous countries around the world, which helps micro- smalland
medium-entrepreneurs developing a realistic
business plan, which they implement at their own risk. To break
the vicious circle between donor dependency and lack of viability,
the proponents of CEFE have proposed a new paradigm, turning
BDS as a public good into a private
good. They argue that BDS should be provided by the private
sector and governments should only facilitate the market development
of BDS. Accordingly, the delivery of BDS has now been made a
private business in various countries, including
Sri Lanka. In Sri Lanka, 18 organisations are making use of
CEFE as a fee-based BDS in different contexts and environments,
10 of them in the private sector. To a good number of them,
BDS is a major source of income. These organisations use CEFE
for three major components of their portfolio: training &
capacity development of BDS organisations; brand image development;
and product packaging & marketing. Market orientation, marketing
and diversification for agricultural producers, processors and
traders is one of several products, with two major parts: market
orientation and business planning. The benefits include: sustainable
increase in income, better ability to analyse production and
marketing patterns, and the identification and use of opportunities
for improved marketing.
The CEFE team in Sri Lanka has also analysed most of the major
microcredit schemes, which were all donor-driven, and found
that most of them were not successful. They have already tested
and introduced a new approach to link commercial BDS and commercial
microfinance schemes operated by microfinance institutions and
banks. The approach includes direct linking of CEFE training
and microcredit and opening of CEFE training for microcredit
customers on a commercial basis.
A different experience is reported from India,
where Nabard, the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development,
has promoted the establishment of about 1.6 million self-help
groups (SHGs) of the rural poor and their linkages with some
36,000 bank branches. The approach, referred to as SHG Banking,
is applied all over India: in marginal as well as
high-potential areas. Numerous NGOs and government organisations
are involved in social mobilisation and non-financial services.
An example is Bharatiya Agro Industries Foundation
(BAIF) Development Research Foundation an NGO which has helped
some 13,000 tribal families, who are among the disadvantaged
in India, to cross the poverty line: (i) through sustainable
agri-horti-silvicultural production on 12,000 acres of rehabilitated
lands and (ii) through commodity processing. Against a historical
background of the direct sale of raw materials, six vertically
integrated layers of production, processing and marketing were
established in remote forest areas:
(i) individual farm households for basic production on wastelands,
(ii) small farmer groups for procurement and grading, (iii)
community organisations (Gram Vikas Mandals) for the establishment
of community processing facilities,
(iv) village planning committees for the organisation and coordination
of activities, (v) regional cooperatives for finishing and packaging;
and (vi) an apex organisation for federated
marketing. BAIF acted as a resource and technology sourcing
agency, introduced streamlined systems, provided managerial
backup services, and facilitated credit and market linkages.
The two major products where producers took control of the full
commodity chain were mangoes and cashews. In the case of
mangoes, procurement and grading alone added 20% value. In a
second step, the raw mangoes are cut into pieces and semi-pickled
at village level, which are then brought to the final pickling
stage by cooperatives, where they packaged and forwarded to
a Producer Company for federated marketing. Value addition through
processing contributed substantially
to a sustainable increase in employment and income.
Combined financial and non-financial services
Combining financial and non-financial services
including BDS under a single institution is frequently advocated
as a necessary strategy in poverty alleviation and rural development.
The favourable role played by the Cameroon Gatsby Trust may
serve as an example.
Financial and nonfinancial services to the commodity
sector in Cameroon Cameroon is a country where financial and
non-financial services strategies for processors, producers
and traders have developed over a period of almost 20 years.
The process was spearheaded by the Gatsby Root Crops Project,
1985-93, with a focus on improved technologies for cassava,
yam and sweet potatoes. It was replaced in 1994 by a sustainable
financial institution, the Cameroon Gatsby Trust (CGT), which
continued multiplying and disseminating improved varieties,
but at the same time provided microcredit to the producers.
During a third phase individual credit was replaced by group
lending, comprising microcredit through solidarity groups and
mesocredit to associations of small groups (at a satisfactory
repayment rateof 96.5%). This also marked the cultivation of
a most remarkable approach: building on preexisting indigenous
self-help groups including rotating and non-rotating savings
and credit associations, which are ubiquitous in Cameroon and
neighboring countries.
A fourth phase started in 2003 by adding a range of nonfinancial
services, comprising skill training in such fields as soap-making
and tie-dye making, food conservation and tuber multiplication;
group and association management training; financial management;
and facilitation of local and regional trade fair participation.
The trade mark of CGT is now the combination of financial services
with business development services for three major market segments
in the commodity sector: producers, comprising yam, cocoyam,
sweet potatoes, plantains, corn and cassava as well as livestock
farmers; cassava and textile processors; and traders in food,
handicrafts, textiles and livestock.
The CGT approach constitutes an option in which special emphasis
is placed on (i) group and association formation on the basis
of pre-existing indigenous group structures,(ii) internal financial
intermediation based on savings, (iii) their upgrading to sustainable
formal organisations, (iv) access to refinancing by CGT, (v)
networking among associations, and (vi) linkages of associations
with other institutions.
Drawing some lessons
Care has to be taken in generalising singular
observations. In a multi-country evaluation of NGO programmes
in francophone West Africa, it was considered important for
such services for rural micro-entrepreneurs to be linked. Among
the non-financial services were literacy training, group formation,
organisational assistance, empowerment assistance, informainformation
dissemination, and skills training.
Some NGOs had carried out both types of services themselves,
some had created external MFIs, some had transferred the execution
of financial services to existing MFIs. However, some similar
weaknesses were found in most of the models: Social and business
orientations were rarely separated, and/or the transformation
from a socially oriented to a business-oriented design of the
financial programmes proved to be very difficult and lengthy.
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