Title: EBRDs Support to Territorial Development
1EBRDs Support to Territorial Development
Francesca Pissarides Office of the Chief
Economist Lisbon, 3 December 2007
2What is the EBRD?
- AAA-rated international financial institution
founded in 1991, owned by 61 national and two
inter-governmental institutions - 20 billion capital base
- The largest lender and private equity investor in
Central Eastern Europe and CIS
3What are the EBRDs objectives?
- To promote transition to market economies by
investing mainly in the private sector - To mobilise significant foreign direct investment
- To support privatisation, restructuring and
better municipal services to improve peoples
lives - To encourage environmentally sound and
sustainable development
4Foundations of EBRD operations
- Apply sound banking principles to every project
- Support but not replace private investors
- Advance the transition to a full market economy
5How does EBRD support territorial development?
- Some examples
- Municipal and environmental infrastructure
- Agribusiness sector
- Non-financial support to small and medium sized
enterprises - Financial support to micro, small and medium
sized enterprises - And also large projects ? Russia, Kazakhstan
6Agribusiness development
- Involvement spans all activities throughout the
production chain, from processing and trading to
food distribution, packaging and retailing - Leveraging on upstream linkages in farming sector
- Major role in developing the sector by supporting
local and foreign corporate clients as well as
micro, small and medium-sized enterprises with
both debt and equity financing
7Municipal and Environmental Infrastructure
- Commercial structuring of financing for local
authority infrastructure, equipment and services - Promotion of commercialisation and
corporatisation of services - Support for improved legal / regulatory
structures - Facilitation of appropriate private sector
involvement - Environmental improvement in line with EU
directives - Financial support from EU, others
- EBRD helps local authorities meet their
infrastructure needs
8Municipal business sectoral breakdown
(cumulative)
mm
9Non-Financial support to SMEs
- TurnAround Management (TAM) Business Advisory
Services (BAS) Programmes are non-financial
enterprise support programmes assisting private
enterprises in the SME Sector - Not-for-profit and 100 donor funded
- Managed by EBRD London
- Works directly with enterprises, providing
industry specific advice to individual SMEs with
10-2000 employees - Assists enterprises to operate successfully and
develop new business skills
10TurnAround Management (TAM) Programme
- Started in 1993
- Almost 1,300 projects in 27 countries
- Private enterprises with 100-1,500 employees
- Uses industry specific management expertise
- Works at senior management level of enterprises
- Maintains a database of over 3,200 advisors
11Business Advisory Services (BAS) Programme
- Started in 1995
- 4,245 projects with 3,667 enterprises to date in
17 countries - Currently 23 local offices
- Private micro, small and medium enterprises
- Utilises local consultancy services
- Removes barriers to growth
- Develops local consultancy capacity
- Over 1,600 accredited consultants
12TAM/BAS Programme Team Based in London/EBRD
BAS 4,245 projects to date in 17 countries
(Currently 23 local offices)
TAM 1,282 projects in 27 countries
- Engaged 1,600 local consultants
- Aggregate turnover EUR 10 billion
- Total employees 312,000
- During evaluation we have found
- 92 projects rated satisfactory or better
- Productivity increased by 16
- Turnover increased by 28
- Employment increased by 19
- Aggregate turnover USD 18.5 billion
- Total employees 860,000
- During evaluation we have found
- 82 projects rated satisfactory or better
- Productivity increased by 26
- Turnover increased by 26
13Financial Support to MSMEs
- Objective
- Provide sustainable access to financial services
to micro and small enterprises not catered for by
the formal financial sector
14Principles
- Ensure fast and broad outreach, including remote
areas, i.e. disbursements of loans under 2,000
within 24 hours and gt1,850 outlets - Ensure commercial viability of MSE lending as
building block for sustainability - Integration of MSE lending operations into formal
financial system as a standard product, including
micro loans under 1,000 - Efficient use of Technical Assistance funds with
clear and measurable performance benchmarks /
CGAP Best Practice Standards
15Results
- Loan Range
- Micro Loans typically between 50 and 10,000
- Small Loans typically between 10,000 and
200,000 - Medium up to 500,000
- Overall average loan size 5,968
- Over 4,400 loans per working day disbursed
- Lending through existing commercial banks
- 55 active partner banks
- Lending through specialised microfinance
institutions - 13 Greenfield MSE Banks, delivering wide range
of financial services to MSEs, where EBRD
participates - 22 NGOs
16Successes (end September 2007)
- 2.8 million loans disbursed for US 18.4 billion
- 88,000 loans disbursed for 600 million monthly
- Arrears over 30 days 1.6 of portfolio
- Strong year on year growth
- 10,450 banking staff intensively trained (on the
job, minimum one year)
17Total Number of MSE Loans
- Disbursed as of September 2007
18Total Volume of MSE Loans
- Disbursed as of September 2007 (million US)
19Objectives of technical assistance in MSE lending
- training well qualified lending personnel,
- putting in place streamlined and well monitored
lending procedures, and - replacing collateral-based lending with proper
cash-flow based credit analysis - Strict attention to terms conditions to
- i) lower transactions cost for banks and
borrowers, and - ii) increase the boundaries of whos bankable
- TA covers initial start-up training costs and
regional expansion on a declining scale as local
experts start to replace external experts. - Banks always co-finance
20Subsidy efficiency (Kazakh Small Business
Programme)
21Commercial banks, dedicated Microfinance banks
and NGOs
- Where there are commercial banks that meet
standards, TA and loan funds are provided - Where no suitable commercial banks are available,
specialised MFIs are set up - NGOs best-practice, track-record, and
preferably commercialising so that they can
attract capital market funds rather than scarce
donor resources for lending
22Greenfield Microfinance Institutions
23NBMFIs IMON, Tajikistan
- Started as the National Association of Business
Women in Tajikistan - Provides over 2,000 loans monthly
- Serves over 18,000 clients with a portfolio of
7.8m - Transforming into a deposit-taking MFI
24Issues in more difficult environments
- Exposure Issues Undercapitalisation of banks
limits on-lending capacity (first-loss, risk
sharing, and co-financing funds needed to
leverage EBRD funding) - Technical Capacity is scarce and far more
extensive intervention required - Lack of basic skills in all spheres
- Individual problems greater but their sum does
not add up to impediments, but rather opportunity
to work with management and build-up efficient
lending departments thus contributing to
well-functioning banks - Institution building at its best
- Broader intervention, e.g. facilitating equity
investment, TFP and other products
25Innovation in MSE lending programmes
- Increase rural lending and village outreach, e.g.
mobile micro-banks at ProCredit Georgia and
Procredit Moldova mobile units and credit unions
in Mongolia - Farm Lending specialised loan officers
(crop/climate patterns)/modified group
methodologies - Push extremes particularly, express micro loans
(under 1,000, no collateral, 24 hrs.) and longer
term fixed asset loans as borrowers grow
26Looking Forward New Initiatives
- Developing rural finance and agri-lending
- Local currency funding
- Institutional transformation (Azerbaijan, Bosnia,
Kazakhstan) - Commercial syndication
- Specialised lending products energy efficiency,
tourism, etc. - Remittances
- Legal and regulatory framework support
- Innovations to increase efficiency, market
outreach and competition
27Why not more MSE lending?
- The MSE market penetration remains low in most
countries - Market opportunities remain unexploited
- Banks still have a lot of room to enter the
market - Existing loan products might not be complete
answer (training, insurance, etc.) to clients