Title: Workshop on Financial Inclusion
1Workshop on Financial Inclusion APEC 2013 23
24 May 2013 North Sulawesi- Indonesia
2Regulatory Framework to Promote Financial
Eligibility of Poor Households and SMEs
Workshop on Financial Inclusion APEC 2013 23
24 May 2013 North Sulawesi- Indonesia
3Presentation Outline
- The Financial Exclusion Problem
- The Concept of Financial Eligibility
- Role of Regulation
- Regulatory Experience of Selected Countries
- Conclusions
4 An Acute Global Problem
Financial Exclusion Figures
Billions
- Note According to latest available data, the
adult population now is about 5.08 billion
5 An Acute Global Problem
Asia is home for 59 of the Unbanked Adults
Millions
6MSMEs in Emerging Markets
Estimated Number of MSMEs
Millions
7MSMEs in Emerging Markets
Do not use financing from financial institutions
at all want it
70
8MSMEs in Emerging Markets
- Many formal SMEs are unserved or under-served
- 45- 55 of 25 million to 30 million formal SMEs
do not have access to formal institutional loans
or overdrafts - Over a quarter of the formal SMEs do not even
have a bank account - Estimated credit gap for formal SMEs in East Asia
alone is in the range of 250 billion to 310
billion - Source Stein P. et al. (2010) . Two Trillion
and Counting. - Source IFC and Mckinsey and Company Study (2010)
9A Diverse Group
- The Financially Excluded are a diverse group
- disadvantaged and vulnerable groups
- low income households
- Poor people without permanent residential address
- handicapped persons
- undocumented migrants
- women-owned SMEs
- SMEs in rural areas
- Newly established SMEs
10Self Reported Barriers
11Financial Eligibility
- Lower income people and most SMEs are categorized
as unbankable partly because they are unable to
meet the requirements of banks for account
opening, saving or credit. - If a SME must submit a tax return to borrow from
a bank, those without tax returns are made
ineligible. - If regulations do not permit financial
institutions to accept movable assets as
collateral for loans, most SMEs will not be
eligible to borrow
12The Role of Regulation
- If the regulatory approach is not risk-based,
negative impact on the poor - A risk-based approach is key to financial
inclusion - Taking a Risk-Based Approach to AML/CFT
safeguards - Simpler KYC norms/CDD measures for small value
accounts - Flexible type of documentation that are within
reach of poor people - Applying a Progressive or Tiered KYC/CDD
approach
13Pro-Poor Regulatory Measures India
- Reserve Bank of India (RBI) regulation in the
early 1990s allowed banks to open savings
accounts for Self-Help-Groups (SHGs) - 60 of the SHGs faced challenges in complying
with KYC norms -
- In March 2013, RBI simplified KYC norms for SHGs
- Verification of all SHG members no longer
required - For credit access, no separate KYC if
verification has already been done for savings
account
14Pro-Poor Regulatory Measures India
- AML/CFT regulations authorize banks to open Basic
Savings Bank Deposit Account (BSBDA) without
normal identification documentation - Only customers signature or thumb print and a
self-attested photo is needed - BSBDAs as of 31 Dec 2012-171.43 million
15Pro-Poor Regulatory Measures Philippines
- Central Bank regulations relaxed identification
document requirements -
- Allowed banks to accept documents that are within
reach of poor people - Barangay certification or certification of a
local leader is accepted as proof of
identification and residence
16Pro-Poor Regulatory Measures Philippines
- Philippines required SMEs to provide tax return
and audited financial statement - Most SMEs financially ineligible
-
- In early 2012, Central Bank exempted small
enterprises from these requirements increasing
financial eligibility of the SMEs
17Pro-Poor Regulatory Measures Fiji
- Identification document can be provided by a
suitable referee - Suitable referees include village headmen,
religious leader and - Official of the Fiji Sugar Corporation sector
office for sugar cane farmers and laborers
18Pro-Poor Regulatory Measures South Africa
- Regulation provides for a form of simplified CDD
for products meeting specific requirements - No need for the verification of residential
address - This exemption enabled banks to launch the Mzansi
account -
19Pro-Poor Regulatory Measures Mexico
- The Transparency Law of 2007 made it mandatory
for banks to offer a fee-less basic deposit
product - Financial authorities (CNBV, SHCP and Banxico)
joined efforts to identify regulatory barriers to
financial inclusion - Major barrier identified was the undifferentiated
implementation of KYC requirements
20Pro-Poor Regulatory Measures Mexico
- In 2011, Mexico reformed its legal framework for
AML/CFT - Established a system that divides bank accounts
into four levels - Introduced simplified KYC and CDD requirements
for account opening that are tiered in line with
risk levels -
- By July 2012, the number of level 1-3 bank
accounts reached a total of 9.4 million
21FATF and pro-Poor Regulations
- FATF recommendations strongly support adoption of
RBA to AML/CFT safeguards - Revised FATF recommendations allow for simplified
CDD measures with a lower risk of ML and TF - FATF encourages regulators to consider applying
Progressive or Tiered approach to KYC/CDD - FATF Recommendations provide adequate flexibility
for pro-poor regulation - But some countries are yet to take advantage of
this flexibility
22SSBs New Outlook on Financial Inclusion
- Since the call from G20 Leaders in 2010 for
Standard Setting Bodies (SSBs) to find ways to
promote financial inclusion significant progress
has been to make the SSBs more sensitive to FI
issues. - The Alliance for Financial Inclusion (AFI) and
other Implementing Partners of GPFI have been
promoting dialogue with SSBs and FATF and BCBS
have issued guidance papers. - The 5th G24-AFI Policymakers Roundtable on
Financial Inclusion, held on 17 April 2013
endorsed a proposal for SSBs to participate in
peer learning to support countries in
implementing balanced policies.
23Conclusion
- Regulatory framework has a profound impact on
financial eligibility of poor households and SMEs - But regulators struggle to keep abreast of new
technologies and business models - SSBs have advocated a risk-based approach to
balance financial stability/integrity with
financial inclusion. - Peer learning through AFI plays a critical role
in helping countries to implement balanced
regulatory frameworks
24Discussion