Transcript Slide 1

The
Microfinance
Industry
in India …
Presented by
Mathew Titus,
Executive Director,
Sa-Dhan
Microfinance in India (1)
Access to Financial Services…
• 75 million families rely predominantly on informal
sources to access Rs. 50,000 crore (US $11.34
billion) of credit
• Penetration of life insurance services in rural India
is <10%. Asset, health, weather and other general
insurance services are still nascent
• Securities, commodity derivatives, pensions…much
less used…as are money transfers, remittances…
Microfinance in India (2)
Channels for Delivery…
• Govt. supported SHG-Bank Linkage programme
– Involvement of 35,294 branches of 560 Banks
(Commercial banks - 48; Regional Rural Banks - 196; and
Cooperative Banks - 316) in 563 districts and 30 states
• Another channel of delivery are: 700 – 800 MFIs,
mostly small and registered as NGOs
• Since 2000, banks have only targeted 15 - 20 larger
MFIs as part of priority sector lending
Microfinance in India (3)
Growing interest in Microfinance…
•
Private Investors and equity funds are now
financing fast growing MFIs
•
Some state governments are funding
14 million
SHG-programmes
clients in
2007-08
•
GoI has appointed NABARD to manage
the Microfinance Development & Equity
Fund (MFDEF) with a volume of INR 200
crore.
•
GoI has presented
a Microfinance Bill to
6 million
parliament Clients in
•
…
2005-06
Over 50
million
Clients in
2005-06
Why This Interest in Microfinance?
Perceived benefits…
•
•
Access to doorstep, flexible
and affordable financial
services empowers and
equips the poor to make
their own choices and fight
poverty, in a self-determined
manner.
It also enables the poor to:
increase household
incomes, accumulate
assets, invest in health
and educational aspects,
reduce vulnerability to
crises, enhance food
security
MFIs can deliver these benefits
on a permanent and sustainable
basis to large numbers of poor,
often without donor support
Key Outreach Statistics…
• SHG – Bank Linkage Program
– 40 million households gained access to
formal credit (90% women)
-
Cumulative disbursement as on 31st
March 2007 – Rs. 180 billion (approx.
US $ 4.1 billion)
-
Highly skewed (75% of the funds flowing
to 4 states in Southern India)
• MFIs, 2 third of whom are
Sa-Dhan Members
– Cumulative loan outstanding of Rs. 60
billion (approx. US $ 1.1 billion)
– Reaching over 14 million clients
Huge GAP between DEMAND and SUPPLY !!!
Huge Unmet Financial Needs…
Demand from 100 million Poor and Vulnerable
Households in India (in $ Billion)
$100 Billion
20x Growth Factor
approx.
$5.2 Billion
Finance
Accessed
By Poor
Households
Finance
Needed
By Poor
Households
Source: World Bank; CGAP (Occasional Paper #8, 2004,
access-data from March 2008, Sa-Dhan)
While there
has been
Significant
growth in
access to
finance in the
last decade,
there is still a
huge unmet
demand
Why Banks Don’t Lend to Poor…
Because of High Risks and High Transactions Costs…
High risks
due to…
Collateral free loans to poor
women
High transaction costs
due to…
A large number of very small
loans to rural locations
So, loans sharks
exploit the
poor’s lack of
access to credit,
by charging as
high as between
36-84%
interest and
higher, in some
cases…
The Need for Sa-Dhan…



A common platform for
collective action and sharing to
reach the economically weaker
population
Promotion of multiple
approaches that are
complementary in nature
Model neutral advocacy for
healthy growth of the sector
 Enhancing institutional capacity and
client perspectives within the sector
 Providing technical assistance to
enhance the economic and
livelihood opportunities for the poor
 Integrating microfinance with
education, health etc
Sa-Dhan, The Origins…

Established in 1998, Sa-Dhan today represents 197
agencies involved in microfinance across the different parts
of the country, pursuing various MF models
Mission of Sa-Dhan:
 To build the field of community development finance in
India and to help its members and associate institutions
to better serve low income households, particularly
women, in both rural and urban India, in their quest for
establishing stable livelihoods and improving their
quality of life
Sa-Dhan’s Objectives…
1. To encourage new and existing Microfinance
Institutions (MFIs) to expand
2. To create opportunities for existing and new
MFIs and FIs to enter Microfinance by
establishing a supportive legal and regulatory
environment
3. To build a strong financial system in the form
of Community Development Finance
Institutions (CDFIs) with the help of MFIs,
NGOs and others
Growth of Microfinance and Associated
Risks (1)…
MFIs with
portfolio
over Rs. 50 crore
+40.5%
8
MFIs
MFIs with
portfolio
between Rs. 5
and 50 crore
MFIs with
portfolio
up to Rs. 5 crore
2
MFIs
+97.5%
32
MFIs
+78%
Unweighted growth rate
per category, March
2006 to March 2008
Growth of Microfinance and Associated
Risks (1)…
•
•
As Sa-Dhan and its members grow, in their mission to
build an inclusive and sustainable financial sector for the
poor in India, one aspect is likely to come up, time and
again, as we have seen in the last year – The
accusation of MFIs charging ‘Usurious’ Interest Rates
and related aspects as has happened in Andhra
Pradesh in 2006
Some of the consequences of this motivated accusation
include – suggestions for capping interest rates, strict
action against MFIs, subsidized lending by the State
and the like
Growth of Microfinance and Associated
Risks (2)…
•
Practitioners know that these accusations are not build on facts. E.
g. Sa-Dhan for 2007-08 finds an average portfolio yield of 21% compared to total cost ratio of 19%.
•
The fact of the matter is that such
‘false’ accusations, would only
increase as the Microfinance
sector further expands and this
must be seen as a normal and
natural part of delivering
microfinance on a large scale.
•
As the industry strengthens and more and more poor people
demand access and are included in the larger financial
system, such meaningless accusations will largely become
irrelevant
Growth of Microfinance and Associated
Risks (3)…
•
Such challenges essentially emanate
from the influence of various vested
interest groups (including local
money lenders and others), who, in
the guise of appearing to help the poor,
are in fact denying them access to tailor
made financial services
•
They are perhaps even forcing the
poor again into being dependent on
local informal sector money lenders,
who charge as high as 80-100%
effective interest rates (EIR)
So, such challenges have to be countered factually and maturely.
Accordingly, Sa-Dhan’s has evolved a long-term, multi pronged
strategy towards the same, as outlined in the next few slides and
has been engaging, sensitising and seeking support of several
stakeholders to find a long-term solution to this problem
So, Whom is Sa-Dhan Sensitising?
Sensitising…
1.
Policy Makers,
Central and
State
Governments
and Regulators
2.
The General
Public and Civil
Society
3.
Banks,
Wholesalers
and Investors
4.
MFIs and
NGOs involved
in Microfinance
These aspects given
here are not exhaustive
On What Aspects…
1.
Why lending to poor can be costly, using
arguments of transaction costs, lack of
collateral, information asymmetry etc
2.
What additional benefits accrue to the poor
from MFIs that provide doorstep banking?\
3.
Why only sustainable MFIs can ensure
long term access to financial services for
the poor
4.
How competition will naturally reduce
interest rates while enhancing access
5.
How and why capping of interest rates will
again exclude the poor and reduce access
6.
Why poor prefer access to a continuous
stream of financial services rather than
short term subsidies
7.
Why MFIs should practice client sensitive
microfinance
Sensitising Policy Makers To…
• Illustrate the impact of
microfinance on various
aspects
• Highlight the urgent
need for enhancing
access to tailor made
financial services for the
poor
• Establish an enabling
legislation, as in other
countries, where such an
environment has helped
the Microfinance sector
scale-up and reach large
numbers of poor people
in a sustainable manner
Some Key Outputs
Objective and well conducted research studies
on actual costs of lending to the poor, existing
levels of access, comparative cost structures in
servicing the poor, impact of capping interest
rates in terms of reduced access, effects of
competition in reducing interest rates etc
Videos/films on impact of microfinance, good/bad
practices in microfinance, impact of subsidies etc
Documentaries and media articles on various
models of microfinance and their impact,
Human Interest Case Studies on Impact and
Livelihoods, usually involving clients
Enabling MFIs To…
Help rationalise their cost structures and make them more
efficient, transparent, accountable, client oriented and
competitive.
Follow a VOLUNTARY CODE OF CONDUCT including
standards of Corporate Governance with specific
disclosure norms and several other aspects
Establish minimum standards for microfinance systems in
areas such as:
•
•
•
•
•
Management Information Systems (MIS),
Risk management, internal controls and internal audits,
Portfolio management guidelines,
Accounting standards, capital adequacy and the like, and
Loan officer and field worker certification
Working With Lenders and
Regulators To…
• Ensure that growth of Microfinance is always
accompanied by commensurate development of
systems, governance and management practices
• Advocate with GoI for a microfinance bill that will
ensure sound practices in microfinance, open
opportunities for thrift, among others
• Sensitise them to carry out due diligence in an
effective manner
– Appropriate loan portfolio audits
– Transparent financial audits as per best practices
– On and off site supervision, where possible and necessary
Microfinance: Uplift ever more
Indians from poverty!
A wide choice of
Micro-savings,
-credit,
-insurance,
-remittances, …
Micro-credit
Mostly Grouplending