1 / 12

A Friendly Introduction to Microfinance

A Friendly Introduction to Microfinance. w ith Sanghmitra Gautam. The start of Microfinance . Why was there a gap in service? The first Microfinance loan: USD 27.00 lent to a group of 42 women in rural Bangladesh Each of the women made a profit of USD 0.02 . Before Microfinance .

von
Download Presentation

A Friendly Introduction to Microfinance

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Friendly Introduction to Microfinance with Sanghmitra Gautam

  2. The start of Microfinance • Why was there a gap in service? • The first Microfinance loan: • USD 27.00 lent to a group of 42 women in rural Bangladesh • Each of the women made a profit of USD 0.02

  3. Before Microfinance • Self-Help Groups (SHG) • ROSCAs (Rotating Savings and Credit Association) • Post Offices in India • ‘SUSU’ Collectors in Ghana • Community Banks (NABARD India)

  4. What did Microfinance bring? • Instutionalized the process of lending credit • Grameen Bank in Bangladesh (1983) • Transition from Microcredit to Microfinance • Financial self-sufficiency • Sustainable productivity from credit • Access to financial services

  5. Household Demand • Savings: • Education of children • Insurance against shocks (Health, Weather etc.) • Smoothing Household consumption • Loans: • Investment to increase productivity

  6. Supply ‘provide loans for investment in an income generating activity’

  7. Theory behind the policy • Why doesn’t the free market supply financial services? • The standard Principal – Agent Problem • Presence of Asymmetric Information • Transaction Costs • Adverse Selection (Screening/Signalling) • Moral Hazard (Monitoring) • Enforcement Costs (Repayment of loans)

  8. How does it work? • GROUP LENDING • Mechanism: Joint Liability Default Clause • Delegation of agency costs to the borrowers • Efficiency gains – borrowers can screen, monitor and enforce repayments at a lower cost • Enforcement of repayment via social sanction among peer members

  9. How does it work? • INDIVIDUAL LENDING • Mechanisms • Progressive Lending • Loans conditional on savings • Loans to Women • Public disclosure of borrowers’ repayment history • Non-Refinancing threat • Cross Reporting (MFIs)

  10. Many Faces of Microfinance • Loans for income generating activities • Small scale investment in machinery • Livestock (e.g. dairy farming) • Cash loans to smooth Household consumption • Seasonal liquidity constraints • Micro Insurance • Micro Savings

  11. Many Faces of Microfinance Recent Developments • M-Pesain Kenya • Loans to urban poor (Developed Countries) • Loans for health infrastructure – Clean water and sanitation

  12. THANK YOU

More Related