1 / 21

November 2012

Social Cash Transfers and Financial Inclusion: Evidence from Four Countries. November 2012. CGAP: an independent policy and research center. CGAP is an independent policy and research center dedicated to advancing financial access for the world's poor .

powa
Download Presentation

November 2012

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. Social Cash Transfers and Financial Inclusion: Evidence from Four Countries November 2012

  2. CGAP: an independent policy and research center CGAP is an independent policy and research center dedicated to advancing financial access for the world's poor. It is supported by 34 development agencies and private foundations who share a common mission to alleviate poverty. Housed at the World Bank, CGAP provides market intelligence, promotes standards, develops innovative solutions and offers advisory services to governments, service providers, donors, and investors. • At a glance: • 8 locations: offices in Washington DC and Paris, with 6 regional representatives based in Abidjan, Dhaka, Moscow, Nairobi, Beirut and Singapore • ~50 staff • 150,000+ copies of CGAP publications distributed annually 2

  3. For government: Is building inclusive financial services into social transfer programs affordable for the social program? COST Sought to address key questions • For recipients: Will poor recipients use financial services if these are • offered to them? • USAGE • For providers: Can financial institutions offer financially inclusive • services to G2P payment recipients on a profitable basis? • BUSINESS CASE 3

  4. Social Cash Transfers and Financial Inclusion: Evidence from Four Countries South Africa’s Social Security Agency Mexico’s Oportunidades Colombia’s Familias en Accion Brazil’s Bolsa Familia • Various unconditional transfers reaching 9 million recipients (30% of population) • Various payments methods: prepaid smart cards and magstripe cards linked to account • CCT program started in 1997 reaching 6 million households (20% of population) • Bansefi has various payment mechanisms, including cash, magstripe cards linked to accounts, smart cards • CCT program reaching 2.4 million families (11% of population) • 1.8 million interest-bearing savings accounts opened by Banco Agrario • CCT program reaching 12.9 million families (30% of population) • 2 million recipients receive grants into simplified current account accessible via magstripe card 4

  5. Updated Payments Categorization 5

  6. Government Costs • a. Under previous contract; included for comparison only since current contract has no cash payment as defined. • b. $0.10 is the fee paid by SASSA to make a bulk electronic transfer into client bank accounts via the Automated Clearing Bureau; the recipient then pays any costs associated with using the account directly. 6

  7. Government Costs: per country • MDS pays Caixa a fee that is 31% lower ($0.88 compared to $0.60) for a recipient with a mainstream Caixa Facil account than for a limited-purpose Social Card • MDS saves 5.8% of cost of payments by having 15% of banked recipients. If all payments shifted to Caixa Facil, MDS would save 31.5%. Brazil South Africa Colombia Mexico • SASSA also pays a fee that is 54% lower ($4.46 compared to $2.03) for a recipient with a mainstream financial account • Payments made into bank account of recipient’s choice, bulk electronic transfer costs 10c. • If SASSA receives reports for reconciliation, benchmark is $2.03. • Electronic payments are not cheaper than cash • Fee paid to sole bidder Banco Agrario is $6.24 USD, a substantial increase from previous cash payment fee of $5.20. • High price reflected the short term nature of the initial contract and bank’s need to upgrade its system, issue millions of debit cards, capture biometric information and build a new merchant network. • Payments into mainstream financial accounts are slightly more expensive than cash payments ($2.84 compared to $2.35). • Gov. set norms for distance recipients should have to travel to collect payments, resulting in higher costs across thinly populated areas. • In 2010, President directed all G2P disbursements to electronic means by end of 2012. 7

  8. Government Costs: main takeaways • Case of Brazil & South Africa: • Evidence shows that move from cash to electronic payments can be less expensive for the programs • Evidence shows that it may be cheaper to use mainstream financial accounts from the start, rather than get stuck in limited purpose, closed loop systems • Case of Colombia & Mexico: Evidence shows that cost per payment increases if upfront development of new distribution network is included • Case of Colombia: Limited purpose instruments should be implemented in a way that makes it possible to easily transition to mainstream financial accounts later 8

  9. Recipient Usage Evidence from research • Recipients welcome convenience of electronic payments over cash. • Tejerina and Maldonado (2010) report that recipients in Colombia saved only 9 minutes on average after transition to bank accounts, but saved 15% of travel costs and cut the waiting time from 5 hours on average to 30 minutes. • Few recipients automatically use new bank account to save or for much else beyond withdrawing benefits. • Causes of low customer use beyond withdrawal may be: • Beneficiaries don’t know about account functions • Beneficiaries may fear losing their entitlement if they leave a balance • Beneficiaries perceive that unpredictable fees reduce account balances. Free balance enquiries may be important to build trust. • The accounts may be poorly designed or inconvenient 9

  10. Business Case for Providers 10

  11. Business Case for Providers: average balance needed Average balance needs to be $246 to make account profitable without government fees. Typical balances are $10-$15. = $10-$15 $246 11

  12. Business Case for Providers: average balance needed Fee income of $0.97 per month is needed for bank to break even on account. 12

  13. Business Case for Providers: main takeaways • Business case depends on receiving a regular fee from government. If this fee is at an adequate level, the business case can be attractive. • Without fee, business case is challenging. Governments cannot assume that banks get sufficient revenue from interest on float or from cross-selling. • In time, a combination of increasing balances, more customer-initiated payment transactions and cross-selling may support a stronger business case. • An efficient widespread agent distribution network is key factor in reducing cost of opening accounts and servicing client transactions. 13

  14. 1. Link G2P to the General Retail Payments Ecosystem 14

  15. 2. Design payments framework based on country context Where is the country starting from in terms of available infrastructure, available providers with necessary expertise and a government willing to innovate? Benefits will look very different to governments, recipients, providers in different countries. Understand the correct sequence from cash-heavy to cash-lite, even in different parts of the country at different speeds Design payment arrangements to integrate with other payment channels - path most likely to reduce cost and improve efficiency 15

  16. 3. Smart and appropriate tendering is critical Case of Colombia: Limited purpose instruments should be implemented in a way that makes it possible to easily transition to mainstream financial accounts later This is not a straightforward procurement of a standard good or service e.g. car, computer, or cleaning contract Objective of TOR is to clearly define a ‘problem’ and encourage a variety of possible ‘solutions’ from potential bidders 16

  17. Messy procurement process in South Africa State slammed over social grant costsA number of problems have arisen around the ability of the South African Social Security Agency to manage its social grant distribution programme. By INet Bridge, I-Net Bridge, Updated: 2010/07/07 A number of problems have arisen around the ability of the South African Social Security Agency (Sassa) to manage its R84 billion social grant distribution programme. The problems relate to internal crime and corruption, inefficiency and high costs. Key solutions will be to implement a single tender process - Sassa has not awarded a new tender for three years - and to reduce the high cost of distribution, reported to be as much as 10%. Government wants a move to 80% card and 20% cash split for the social grant distributions - to reduce costs for them, but many clients have trust concerns around a card and still want cash. At the moment, it costs government nearly double to distribute cash via agents that it does for card distribution. A problem is that government has not provided tenders for three years, and banks say they need to build sustainable businesses via longer tenders. 17 Source: Bankable Frontier Associates

  18. Messy procurement process in South Africa 18 Source: http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/awarding-of-social-grants-tender-illegal-invalid-1.1371727#.UEJDImthiSM

  19. 4. Financial inclusion is a key added benefit of payment Enhance impact of cash transfers Reduce vulnerability to shocks Smoothing consumption Save for future consumption, asset purchase Benefits to non beneficiaries Graduation from grant dependence 19

  20. Resource Bold. Chris, David Porteous, and Sarah Rotman. 2012. “Social Cash Transfers and Financial Inclusion: Evidence from Four Countries.” Focus Note 77. Washington, D.C.: CGAP, February.

More Related