Title: BRACs Microfinance Canvas: Financial Services and Strategic Linkages
1BRACs Microfinance CanvasFinancial Services
and Strategic Linkages
2Micro Finance and Holistic Approach
- BRAC believes poor can able to change their lives
if the proper socio economic structure or
enabling environment exits - The poor are diverse group with diverse
livelihoods, needs and potentials which changes
overtime due to lifecycle, new opportunities and
external shocks - This diverse and dynamic reality of poor peoples
lives forms the canvass within which BRAC
conceptualize and design its development
programs, in which Microfinance is a core
elements.
3Micro Finance and Holistic Approach
- BRAC wants to make credit available to the rural
poor at a reasonable price - BRAC believes in a credit plus approach
-
4Microfinance Canvas The Dominant View
Standard commercial bank loans and full range of
savings services
Interest bearing savings accounts for small
savers
Commercial microloans
Poverty progs for food and water, medicine,
nutrition, employment generation, training, etc.
5BRAC Microfinance Canvas
- If we map the various poverty categories onto
BRAC Microfinance programs, we get the following
picture.
6BRAC Micro Finance Canvas
Progoti
Unnoti
Dabi
IGVGD
CFPR/TUP
7Distinguished features
- Provide financial access to the different strata
of the poor, - Provide both backward and forward linkages to its
members, - Provide special health and education services to
BRAC members and their families, - Provide capacity development and awareness
building training for the members, - Provide human rights and legal services for the
members and their families
7
8BRACs Experiences with Building Opportunity
Ladders from Safety Nets IGVGD and CFPR/TUP
- BRAC realizes it is very difficult to reach the
extreme poor through conventional Micro finance - BRAC instead of saying, Oh, too bad, these
extreme poor need subsidized poverty alleviation
program before they can become fit for our
services and let others bother with that while we
run our commercial financial services.
9BRACs Experiences with Building Opportunity
Ladders from Safety Nets IGVGD and CFPR/TUP
- The challenge for BRAC was thinking of ways of
including the extreme poor within its program and
to include them in a way - that is cost-effective and yet goes beyond
transfer.
10IGVGD Program Including those Left Out
- WFP provide a time bound food ration as
Vulnerable Group Feeding (VGF) to the extreme
poor living in vulnerable areas. - BRAC in 1985 approach WFP to implement a new
linkage and sustainable model for the VGF. - The IGVGD program thus designed to link extreme
poor vulnerable poor women to mainstream
development activities.
11IGVGD Program Including those Left Out
- Under this initiative extreme poor are organized
into groups and provided with skill training in
various sectors where BRAC has expertise. - They are also brought under BRAC health services
and network - During the time of food transfer a saving scheme
was developed and later - A small amount of credit provided to them so that
the training they received could be more
meaningfully used for a more secured livelihood
12IGVGD Program Including those Left Out
- The IGVGD program was focus on developing a
systematic approach to take advantage of the
windows of opportunity in the lives of the
extreme poor while they received food transfer
and short-term security. - To provide support on solid ground once the food
transfer period is over.
13IGVGD Program Including those Left Out
- An independent study by the WFP found that
through this strategic linkages more than three
quarters of those who receive the IGVGD card in
every cycle ends up becoming the regular clients
of BRAC Micro Finance program.
14CFPR/TUP Building More Solid Opportunity Ladders
- The IGVGD approach made BRAC even bolder in
carrying out further experiments. - We noticed that those who do not able to graduate
from IGVGD to BRAC Microfinance were among the
poorest and most vulnerable. - The targeting was done by Upazila representative
who sometime selected based on political and
other motives.
15CFPR/TUP Building More Solid Opportunity Ladders
- The VGD women failed to get the full benefit of
the windows of opportunity provided by the food
transfer. This is because - One VGD card was often unofficially shared
between two or more. - Sometimes the VGD card was sold in advance to the
dealer. - BRAC felt the need for a program where it would
have control over the process.
16CFPR/TUP Building More Solid Opportunity Ladders
- From January 2001 BRAC has started a new
experimental program with these challenges in
mind. This is called Challenging the Frontier of
Poverty Reduction Targeting the Ultra Poor and
targeting the social constraints. - There are two broad strategies in this program
one is pushing down and the other is pushing
out.
17CFPR/TUP Building More Solid Opportunity Ladders
- First, the Program seeks to push down the reach
of development programs through specific
targeting of the ultra poor by using a careful
targeting methodology that combines participatory
approaches with simple survey based tool. - Secondly, it seeks to push out the domain
within which existing poverty alleviation
programs operate, by addressing dimensions of
poverty that many conventional approaches fail to
address.
18CFPR/TUP Building More Solid Opportunity Ladders
- Specifically, this involves a shift away from the
conventional service delivery mode of development
programming to focusing on human capital, and the
structures and processes that disempower the
poor, especially women, and constraint their
livelihood. - It is an approach that puts social development,
specifically a rights-based approach to health
and socio-political empowerment, at the heart of
the agenda.
19CFPR/TUP Building More Solid Opportunity Ladders
- The Program components of the pushing down
front includes - A special investment program in the from of
grants of asset/capital in kind and stipend, - Skills development training,
- A program of essential health care and
- Social development program
- Link them to mainstream development activities
and become regular BRAC microfinance VOs member
and thereby enable them develop new and better
options for sustainable livelihood.
20Addressing New VulnerabilitiesRetrenched
state-owned enterprise workers
- Globalization opens up new opportunities as well
as new risks. - Those who lose out are the poor
- In Bangladesh there is no formal safety net
exists for the poor who lost out due to
uncertainties created by the global market
forces. - BRAC assist the state owned retrenched workers in
becoming self-employed or re-entered in the job
market. - This is another example that widen rather than
restricts the imagining of many different ways in
which the possibilities of the institutional
canvas of microfinance may be further harnessed.
21Serving New market Niches Progoti and Unnoti
- A lot of growth potentials exist in the missing
middle that can be facilitated by direct
financial provision. - The Entrepreneurs in this segment of the market
tend to be owner cum operators, self-starters and
innovative. - Yet they are unserved by both formal banks and
microfinance institutions.
22Serving New market Niches Progoti and Unnoti
- The growth of such enterprise have both direct
and indirect impact on poverty alleviation. - They create more jobs and have both forward and
backward linkages in the market. - Good knowledge about this segment of the market
is necessary. - The are different segment in the market
accordingly they need specialized service.
23Serving New market Niches Progoti
- BRAC with its strong local knowledge and
extensive local net work it has in place it felt
it could serve this middle missing. - In 1996 BRAC started the Micro Enterprise Lending
and Assistance (MELA). - The aim of the program is to stimulate the growth
of the small enterprise in semi-urban and rural
areas. - It provide larger loans to both VO and non VO
members.
24Serving New market Niches Unnoti NCDP
- The farm sector also suffer from a strong missing
middle syndrome. - They are entrepreneurial in nature and need
services that is different from microfinance. - BRAC with its strong local knowledge and net
works felt it could serve this sector. - So in 2002 BRAC started Enterprise Development
Program (EDP). - In 2002 BRAC started Crop Diversification Program
in the North-West region of the country.
Organizing farmer and providing loan to high
value crop.
25Employment and Livelihood for Adolescent (ELA)
- BRAC started Adolescent
- Development Program in 2000
- with the following objectives. To
- Provide
- Life skills based education
- Livelihood Training
- Micro credit
- Savings facilities
- So that they can improve their
- quality of life and empower both
- economically and socially
26Livelihood training
- Horticulture and nursery
- Block printing
- Livestock rearing
- Photography
- ICT including fax/photocopy
- Beauty parlour
- Vegetable gardening
- Hatchery
27Components of MF Program
- There are 3 Components of the Mainstream MF
Program. They are - Dabi Micro Lending to the Poor
- Unnoti Agro-business Development
- Progoti Small Enterprise Development.
28products of MF Program
29products of MF Program
30Terms Conditions of a Loan
- Loans are given for individual activities
- No collateral is needed
- Old Age Security Savings deposit of 5 of
the loan amount - 15 flat interest rate
30
31Terms Conditions of a Loan
- After two VO meetings the loan
- disbursement procedure takes place
- A member is eligible to take loan after two
- weeks of her enrollment in the VO
- Loans are repayable through weekly
installments.
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32DABI Micro Lending to the Poor
- Caters to the moderate poor in both rural and
urban areas, - Organizes landless groups (Village
Organizations) and provides them with financial
services and self-employment opportunities, - Provides collateral free loans, savings
facilities, and members death benefit.
33Features of DABI
34UNNOTI Agro-business Lending
- Caters to the small and marginal farmers, who do
not have the capacity to start their own income
generation activities, - Forms Village Organizations so that members can
exchange views and share their knowledge. - Particular type of work Agriculture, Poultry
Livestock Rearing, Aquaculture
35Features of UNNOTI
36PROGOTI Micro-Enterprise Lending
- The aim of the program is to stimulate the growth
of small enterprises in semi-urban and rural
areas which are not served by formal banks and
microfinance institutions. - The Program tends to motivates small/medium
entrepreneurs in the rural and urban areas to
perform better, thus creating job opportunities. - The Entrepreneurs in this segment of the market
tend to be owner cum operators, self-starters and
innovative
37Characteristics of PROGOTI
38PROGRAM INFRASTRUCTURE
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42MIS An Integral Part of Management
- In the 80s, BRAC felt the need of investing in a
strong management information system (MIS) to
meet the challenges of rapid expansion - At present 100 of field offices are automated.
- BRAC is currently using two different types of
software, one of which collects information on
members and other tracks accounts - (Front end visual basic.net and back SQL Server)
43Major Impact of MF Program
- BRAC member households owned 50 higher net
worth than non BRAC members - Nearly 10 of members graduated from being
landless to different landholding groups - Members had 2 times more savings than non-BRAC
members - Higher per capita calorie consumption
- Higher food and non-food expenditure, including
higher ratio of non-food to total expenditure
44Major Impact of MF Program
- Nearly 60 of the members are directly involved
in income generation activities - More than 80 of the loans are being used for
productive investment, asset purchase, and for
housing - BRAC members are significantly better off in
terms of the value of their dwelling places and
per capita floor space of utilization.
45Conclusion
- The first example demonstrate our experiences of
building opportunity ladders for the extreme
poor, those who tend to be left out from
conventional microfinance programs. - The idea here is to
- Design subsidies in ways that provide a window of
opportunity for the extreme poor. - Strengthen the initiatives of the extreme poor so
that they can build the capacities to benefit
from microfinance and other mainstream
development programs.
46Conclusion
- The second one is an example of using
microfinance combined with other interventions to
provide a new chance for building new livelihoods
for people facing sudden vulnerabilities. - The third examples illustrates how BRAC uses the
knowledge embodied in its institutional networks
to provide financial services to new market
segments.
47- Thank You
- Shabbir A Chowdhury
- Director, Microfinance
- BRAC
- Email shabbir.ac_at_brac.net
- Web. www.brac.net
- May 14-15, 2009