Title: What is Microfinance
1What is Microfinance?
- Nanci Lee and Alison Mathie
- November, 2009
2Wealth creation means adding to the stock of
different types of assets or capital
3Relationship between Financial Capital and Social
Capital
4What is Microfinance?
- Small-scale savings, credit, insurance, money
transfers, and any other financial services to
those without access to formal financial services - Microfinance plus. HIV-AIDs supports, legal
literacy, political participation, community
investments
5Self-employed small farmers/fishers street
vendors
6Saving up saving down lump sums
7Accumlating Savings and Credit Groups (ASCAs)
8Approaches to Microfinance
- Ideological Approach
- Community-based
- Poverty Alleviation
- Empowerment/ Rights
- Financial Systems Development
- Intended Impacts
- Local development ownership
- Reduce multi-faceted poverty
- Resources, assets and control over them - voice
- Link informal to formal sector
9Village associations, Niger Example of
Community-Based
- Village association in rural, remote Niger
- Over 200,000 people in small groups of up to 20
people - Basis is voluntary savings that is pooled for
loans, insurance - Oral book-keeping system proven more effective
than written - Receive support from CARE to strengthen the
groups book-keeping, risk assessment - Hot and cold money
- Social capital is intertwined with financial
10Small Groups Unlinked to Financial Sector
11Grameen BankExample of Poverty Approach
- Formed in early 1970s- Mohammed Yunus
- Pioneer of microfinance
- Targets landless those with less than 1.5
hectares of land - 4.1 million borrowers bicycle bankers
- Source of funds member savings- some forced
borrowing banks, foreign donors - Credit focused- business loans housing kitchen
gardens latrines - Grameen phones
- Aims to build social capital also collateral
- Blind spot need for ongoing subsidies
12SEWA BankExample of Empowerment/Rights Approach
- Trade union of self-employed women
- Over 200,000 members
- Source of funds is savings of members
- Collective organized strength
- Urban - individual
- Ruralself-help groups
- National advocacy- informal sector
- Social security (pensions health care literacy)
- Social capital is collateral and leverage
13SEWA Members power in Collective action
14Banco SolExample of Financial Systems
- Became first bank for the poor, 1992
- Before becoming a bank no savings
- 50,000 clients (groups individuals)
- US82 million loan portfolio
- Shareholders equity funds, other microfinance
institutions - Strategy is to cross-subsidize poor with profits
- Social capital is collateral
15Trade-Offs Informal to Formal
INFORMAL
FORMAL
Other services
Flexibility
Management Autonomy
Larger loans
Proximity
Keep money safe
Ownership
Disadvantages savings safe? limited services
Disadvantages Are poorest of the poor able to
access? Costly bureaucratic
16Innovations