Title: Commercial Banks in Microfinance
1Commercial Banks in Microfinance
- Prepared and Presented by
- Mr SEEKU JAABI
- Microfinance Department
- Central Bank of The Gambia
- West Africa English Speaking Regional Workshop
- On Innovations in addressing rural finance
challenges - in Africa held on March 31- April2, 2008 in The
Gambia
2Table of Content
- Introduction
- Banks absence in microfinance
- Banks participation in microfinance
- Modalities of participation- direct/indirect
- Merits of linkage banking
- Challenges in linkage banking
- Microfinance Lessons
- Conclusion
31. Introduction
- Banks in MF has been an issue of much debate
among developing countries and development
economists - Many suggest banks involvement to increase
capacity, efficient resource mgt - Immediate post independence era, most state-owned
banks took up the responsibility in the absence
of private banks
41. Introduction cont.
- However, failed to address the main objects due
to high NPLs, poor mgt, insider abuses, political
interventions, among others - Many were liquidated or reorganised during SAPs
in the 1980s - Govts reduce to providing right conducive
environment - MF is a high-yield emerging market that
commercial markets cannot afford to ignore
51. Introduction cont.
- Globally, MFIs are operating successfully without
subsidies, donor dependence or social
requirements but charging sustainable interest
rates, profit oriented and huge growth potentials - Move to viable and sustainable funding sources,
sound operations, job creation and extensive
outreach to unbanked majority - In Africa, Asia and Latin America, banks have
recorded success stories in MF
62. Banks absence in MF
- No legal status, most in informal sector
- Poor is unbankable perception-unable to provide
collateral, minimum balances, tiny transactions - Risks in agric lending- main occupation of rural
dwellers, erratic rainfall, drought, markets - Lack of conducive policies and at times
conflicting - Lack of technologies to support outreach
- High transaction costs, poor infrastructure
73. Banks participation in MF
- Mission of bank- development, country-wide
operations, promote key sectors of the economy - Compulsion to provide financial services to rural
areas- Some African Asian countries - Long term sustainability objective
- Profitability motive- studies showed that
repayment rate is higher in MF than mainstream
financial sector
83. Banks participation in MF cont.
- Fewer alternative borrowing possibilities
- Women lack access to economic opportunities
- Less mobility of women to care children made them
less delinquent to credit facilities - Market and risk diversification-viable option
- Incentives in MF- credit guarantee schemes, tax
holidays
94. Modalities of banks participation in
Microfinance
- Direct 2. Indirect/Linkage banking
- 1. DIRECT Approach
Banks
SHGs, Coops societies CBOs, low-income
104. Modalities of banks participation Direct cont.
- Banks act as retailers in the delivery of
financial services - Savings mobilised often used as collateral
- Delivery of credit through SHGs, SMEs
- Grameen Bank pioneered group lending
- Successes of the model replicated globally to
reach the poor, reduce risks and tap profit
potential
114. Modalities of banks participation- Direct Cont
- Bank Rakyat Indonesia 2004 data
- Head office, 15 Regional offices, 325 Branches,
3595 Unit Desas/agencies and 392 service posts - Unit TA 3.5bn -35 of BRI, loans 2.1bn- 28 of
Total, Deposits 3.5bn- 42 of total 8.35bn - 3.2 m borrowers, 31.3 million savers
- Repayment rate of 99.6, profit 233m
- ROA 6.8
124. Modalities of banks participation -BRI Culture
- High-level, experienced, committed management
- Professionalism responsibility
- Effective internal controls and supervision
- Transparency accountability
- Training incentives for staff based on unit
profitability, stress on Unit Operational
self-sufficiency - Training for all staff in its 6 training schools
yearly - Financial education and customised products
developed
134.Modalities -Direct Approach
- BRAC- Bangladesh
- NGO transform to a bank in July 2001 with special
focus on SMEs - Head office, 66 Regional offices 44 area
offices, 694 Unit offices - Outstanding loan US 179.81m Sept 2003 -99 of
borrowers were women - Average loan size of 120
- Repayment rate 99.19
- Savings deposits 99.48m
- Staff strength of 62,494 part and full time
144. Modalities- Direct Approach Equity Bank of
Kenya
- 1984-93 building society-deposits ksh 31m, loans
ksh12m, loss 5m, reserves loss ksh35m, TA ksh 28m - Restructuring with two strategic investors-IFC
EIB in 2006 ksh12.7bn savings, 9.2bn loans,
ksh18.2bn TA, profit ksh653m - Minimum opening balance nil, no ledger fees,
account opening nil, no restriction on frequency
of withdrawal, no appointment to see managers,
operate 36 branches, 56 mobile branches, flexible
collateral - Loans available to all account holders
- Same is true for k-rep bank, CERUDEB
154. Modalities of banks participation in MF
Banks
Donors
MFIs
SHGs, CBOs
MSEs, SMEs, Low-income
164. Modalities of banks participation in MF
- Indirect
- Banks act as wholesalers of credit to MFIs for
retailing - MF requires specialised technologies and
methodologies to outreach and banks often lack
this capacity - In line with Strauss Commission of 1996 in South
Africa- banks finance equity of retailing MFI - Studies showed that credit demand for MF clients
is huge, financing gap is met through wholesale
of funds
174. Modalities -Indirect
- Savings mobilised cannot cope to generate such
funds - Therefore wholesale funds will remain a genuine
requirement for MF intermediation for long - Rely on collateral substitutes as opposed to
conventional collateral - By The Gambian MF policies, wholesale funds are
only accessed by licensed MFIs
18The Gambia Financial Sector
Non- Banks
Commercial Banks 10
Finance Company 5
SACAs 63
Credit Unions 67
Bureau De Change 40
Fiduciary Institutions
19Performance of MF Sector
- Dec 05 Dec
06 Dec 07 - Deposits 111.4m 150.6m 262.7m
-
- Loans 103.8m 123.8m
241.4m - Clients Reached 73,488 88,538
92,021
205. Merits of Linkage Banking
- Contributes significantly to deepen the financial
system - Encourages more resource flow, extensive
outreach, increase access to finance - Promotes savings mobilisation for re-investment
ultimately to operational and financial
self-sufficiency- OSS and FSS - Linkage achieves double objectives-increase
access to finance for poverty reduction and
profitability for participants
215. Merits of Linkage Banking
- Women considered highly vulnerable were able to
acquire assets and participate more in
decision-making at community and family levels - Reduce credit administration and ease loan
recovery drive as MFIs have capacity to
intermediate wholesale funds- know the terrain in
MF service delivery
226. Challenges- Linkage Banking
- Lack of legal status for most MFIs hampered such
business relationships - Group commitments are at times questionable, if
formed purely to obtain credit - Some SHGs have leadership problems, have the
tendency of diverting funds in transit - VISACAs fear of being swallowed
237. Microfinance Lessons
- Poor households are bankable, they can save and
repay loans timely - Access to financial services is more important
than the costs (high interest rates) to the poor - Emphasis is on appraisal, timely disbursement of
loan, training (financial education) and
monitoring of loan, financial services have to be
demand driven and flexible
247. Microfinance Lessons cont.
- MFIs are sustainable if integrated into the
financial system - MF contributes to achieving MDGs
- MFIs need to cover costs in order to operate
sustainably - Subsidised funds no longer needed for growing
portfolios- unsustainable - MF has limits i.e great difficulty in reaching
the poorest but in collaboration with other
bodies they can be reached eg BRAC Bangladesh
257. Microfinance Lessons Cont.
- The poor need efficient, sustainable financial
services to help grow out of poverty. Credit
cannot be a one-shot poverty alleviation
mechanism- Credit Plus required - Women repay MF loans more reliably (studies have
shown) due to less access to alternative sources,
vulnerable to peer pressure, less mobility, spend
for the needs of their families - Treat poor as valued customers not beneficiaries
268. Conclusions
- Linkage banking is high on CBGs agenda
- Recent policy changes encourages the
participation of banks in MF either directly or
indirectly - Banks have sufficient funds but has not fully
entered into MF but the informal sector has huge
financing gap and very effective in repaying
loans so linkage is considered the only way
forward - With use of wireless technology, branchless
banking, linkages, poor could be reach even in
remote areas
278. Conclusions
- Informal sector will develop, gradually
formalised with effective integration into the
financial sector - Formal sector need to simplify, downscale to
accommodate the informal sector - Combine the strengths of the two sectors will
enable efficient resource allocation, deepen
financial sector, economic growth - Comparative, absolute comparative advantages are
relevant in linkage banking
28THE END
- THANK YOU ALL FOR
- YOUR ATTENTION
29Contact Address
- Mr Seeku Jaabi
- Microfinance Department
- Central Bank of The Gambia
- Tel 00220- 4223168 / 9911775
- Fax 00220 4226969 / 4201405
- Email sjaabi_at_hotmail.com
- jaabiseeku_at_yahoo.com