Title: Vijay Mahajan
1Research in Microfinance A Practitioners
Perspective
- Vijay Mahajan
- Founder and CEO, BASIX Social Enterprise Group
- Chair, Excom, CGAP
- At CERMis 5th Birthday,
- 18th March 2013, Brussels
2Outline
- (Why am I here?) - How research helped the
design and evolution of BASIX. - Microfinance is closer to engineering than
science the consequences of this - Has research served microfinance well? Comparing
practitioners priorities with cited research
papers - Some glaring acts of omission and commission by
researchers. - What can be done to improve things?
3Some Aphorisms We Believe In
- Nothing is as practical as a good theory Kurt
Lewin - If something is wrong in theory, it will
definitely be wrong in practice Robert McNamara
4How research helped the design of BASIX,
established 1996...1
- We understood from the writings of the Ohio
School (Dale Adams, Richard Meyer, Claudio
Gonsalvez-Vega) the perils of old style rural
credit, and from Jacob Yaron (1992) that our
subsidy dependence index should be negative or
zero. - Marguerite Robinson (1995) showed the importance
of savings and how to mobilise them. We
therefore applied for a banking license at birth!
Got it five years later and till then worked only
as non-deposit taking micro-credit lender. - We understood from Karla Hoff and Joseph E.
Stiglitz (1993) that screening -selection of
the right borrower was only one-third of the
problem incentives to use the loan well, and
enforcement of the loan contracts was equally
important.
5How research helped the design of BASIX,
established 1996...2
- Prabhu Ghate and Arindam Dasgupta of the ADB
(1992) in their book on Informal Finance in Asia,
educated us about this complex and pervasive
competition. We decided to be wary of them. - Clive Bell and TN Srinivasan (1989) and Kailas
Sarap (1992) showed the importance of
intermediaries in agricultural credit. We decided
to use them as a channel! - Patten, Richard H. and Jay K. Rosengard, (1991)
Progress With Profits on Bank Rakyat Indonesias
Unit Desas gave many lessons on designing
operating and incentive systems for rural credit. - David Hulme and Paul Mosley, Finance Against
Poverty (1996) clearly showed the perils of
credit for the very poor. So we added on a
livelihood support strategy through a
non-profit affiliate Indian Grameen Services
since inception in 1996.
6How BASIX interaction with scholars and
researchers has benefited both sides...1
- Malcolm Harper, one the worlds prolific scholars
on microfinance and microenterprise development
was Chair of BASIX Board for 10 years. He has
written several books on the subject and slowly
moved from a minimalist credit to savings-first
to a livelihood approach. - MS Sriram, one of Indias foremost researchers in
microfinance, worked with BASIX for two years
on sabbatical from IIM, Ahmedabad (IIMA). His
publishes on rural finance and microfinance. - Sankar Datta, one of Indias foremost researchers
in livelihood s, worked with us from 1997 to
2011 and set up The Livelihood School and
published a number of papers. - Shamika Ravi of the ISB, Hyderabad has studied
our KBS Bank for savings behaviour and then
served on our Banks Board. She published
Savings Lead to Improved Borrowing Empirical
Analysis of Rural Indian Households.
http//ssrn.com/abstract986882 - Somnath Ghosh of IIM Indore/ MDI Gurgaon serves
on the Boards of the BASIX Bank as well as The
Livelihood School and Runa Sarkar of IIM Calcutta
serves on the Board of CTRAN and BASIX
Consulting.
7 How BASIX interaction with scholars and
researchers has benefited both sides...2
- The founding research for BASIX by Vijay Mahajan
and Bharti Gupta Ramola resulted in a publication
in the Journal of International Development
Vol8, No.2, 211-224 (1996), Financial Services
for the Poor and Women Access and
Sustainability. - Mahajan published Employment and Unemployment in
Andhra Pradesh with S. Mahendra Dev, Economic
and Political Weekly , Vol. 38, No. 12/13 (Mar.
22 - Apr. 4, 2003), - Mahajan argued in favour of a paradigm shift
From Microcredit to Livelihood Finance in
Economic and Political Weekly , Vol. 40, No. 41,
(Oct 2005). - Braja Mishra of The Livelihood School published
in Enterprise Development Microfinance Volume
19, No 4, Oct 2008, a case on BASIX work with
PepsiCo potato cultivation by farmers in
Jharkhand. - BASIX work in health insurance led Vijay Mahajan
to be a co-author of Financing health care for
all challenges and opportunities published in
The Lancet 2011 377 66879 - Mahajan and Vasumathis article in An Investment
Sourcebook on Agricultural Innovation Systems The
World Bank (2012)
8 How BASIX interaction with scholars and
researchers has benefited both sides...3
- Tom Dichter carried out an institutional review
of BASIX in 2001 and later published a Yale case
study on BASIX in 2007. - Bhagwan Chowdhry of UCLA/ISB, Hyderabad published
Monsoon Hedging Economic and Political Weekly,
August 21, 2004, inspired by the rainfall index
insurance offered by BASIX. - Sanjay Sinha of M-CRIL and Frances Sinha of EDA
Rural Systems have carried out a number of
studies on BASIX which led to a better
understanding of sustainability, and social
performance. - An Ivey Case no 9B11M010 on BASIX PepisCo potato
farming published by Gita Bajaj and Neelu Bhullar
of MDI, Gurgaon. - Pastakia has studied BASIX work in promoting
livelihoods in the dairy sector in the Journal of
Entrepreneurship, 2012 - Malcolm Harper, Iyer and Rosser (2011) published
a whole book on BASIX Whose Sustainability
Counts BASIXs Long March to Livelihood
Promotion. Kumarian Press, USA.
9Microfinance is closer to Engineering than
Science - whats the difference?
- Hard sciences progress by the spiral of
falsification - Engineering progresses by the spiral of
working models
Null Hypothesis
Experiment
Observation
Null Hypothesis falsified
New Null Hypothesis
Theoretical understanding
Pilot Testing
Operating Model
Scale Up after improvements
Practice feeds Theory
10Microfinance is engineering because its focus
is solving a problem poverty
- This was based on a theory from development
economics that access to capital (from
1975-2000 only credit later, a wider set of
financial services) can lead to increased income
and reduce poverty. - The rest of the effort was to find the right
model by which credit could be given to
households. - Efficiency parameters were identified early on
operating cost and loan loss. - Effectiveness initially was seen in terms of
outreach
11Microfinance is engineering because its focus
is solving a problem poverty
- This was based on a theory from development
economics that access to capital (from
1975-2000 only credit later, a wider set of
financial services) can lead to increased income
and reduce poverty. - The rest of the effort was to find the right
model by which credit could be given to
households. - Efficiency parameters were identified early on
operating cost and loan loss. - Effectiveness initially was seen in terms of
outreach
12The founding theory of microfinance was weak
how?
- Access to capital did not always lead to
increased income (because of poor training,
missing input-output linkages, adverse markets,
risks, and so on). - Increased income of a household did not always
reduce poverty cashflows were frittered away. - The importance of other financial services
savings, insurance, payments, etc. became
clearer. - Efficiency parameters - lower operating costs and
lower loan loss rates turned out to have
trade-offs. - Effectiveness was not just outreach but positive
impact on poor households and sustainability of
the provider institutions a dichotomy by
itself.
13The theory of microfinance was weak but did
it get any help from research?
- Not much most insights came from reflective
practitioners and close associates /consultants
not from scholars. Grameen Bank, Bangladesh
visits BRI Indonesias Unit Desa BAAC,
Thailand Boulder Courses and Basix Quarterly
Reviews offered lessons to hundreds of early
practitioners. - Most early writing on microfinance was
explanatory how joint liability groups works
for credit (Stiglitz, 1990 Bannerjee and Besley,
1994 Besley and Coate, 1995 Sharma and Zeller,
1997). Likewise, other financial services
savings (M. Robinson, 1990) insurance (e.g.
Townsend, 1992) also focussed on how JLGs
worked.
14The theory of microfinance was weak but did
it get any help from research?
- There were some notable exceptions Hulme and
Mosley (1996) warned against the credit fix in
Finance Against Poverty (Routledge, Chapman
Hall, Inc.) - Mahajan and Ramola, (Journal of International
Development,1996) showed the trade-off between
access and sustainability in a World Bank study.
15How the microfinance field has evolved in practice
- Slide taken from a presentation by Tilman
Ehrbeck, CEO, CGAP, 2013.
16How the field of microfinance research has
evolved... theory trailed practice
17Sharing Lessons for Policy Matters Example -
Countries with Interest Rate Ceilings (23 vs 7)
had Low Access to Microfinance (5 vs 20)
Number of microfinance borrowers shown as
percentage of population living on less than
US 2 per day
Source CGAP Focus Note 2004 The Impact of
Interest Rate Ceilings on Microfinance
18Some acts of omission by microfinance
research
- One of the early assertions of theory was that
interest rate caps on micro-credit will only
squeeze supply (supported by data, e.g. CGAP
Focus Note 2005). - But the related assertion that competition will
bring down interest rates has not been borne
out.. No work has been done to explain this, - Over USD 1.5 billion lost in AP alone. Do
researchers not have a responsibility to study
the impact of this on the poor of AP and on the
industry? - Effect of insurance on reduction in loan defaults
- Effect of support services (training, extension,
market linkages) on loan default rates.
19Some acts of commission by microfinance
research
- The impact of the study of the impact of
microfinance on poor households based on research
techniques like randomised control trials (RCTs)
has been far out of proportion than the views of
hundreds of practitioners. - The results of the early (imperfect?) studies
were amplified by antagonists of microfinance and
mixed with the heady dose of allegations of
malpractice from over-lending to coercive
recoveries to abetting suicides - This created a justification for the actions of
the Government of Andhra Pradesh to ruin a
whole sector built over 15 years of painstaking
work. AP today has 10 million defaulters and 120
pa loans from moneylenders. - Recent corrections in methodology and tone may be
too late. - --------------------------------------
- For example the Impact Study of Spandana by
Banerjee, Duflo et al (2009) was unable to
measure effects after 15-24 months due to
problems with control, yet most effects of
microfinance begin to have effect after two or
three years.
20How Practitioners Use Microfinance Research
21How Practitioners Use Microfinance Research
- This is the cover of a recent CGAP publication,
which has surveyed the literature on randomised
control studies in microfinance. - It shows that of the 12 RCTs studies reviewed on
microfinance, all but one show the MF has a
positive impact (dark means high correlation,
and light means some correlation). - All services have a positive impact, except for
consumption credit, for which the evidence is
mixed.
22The way forward
- We need research at all three levels micro
(households, products, methodologies) meso
(provider institutions, livelihood eco-systems)
and the macro (full microfinance industry) level.
At present focus is mainly on the micro level. - The use of economic theory and statistical
techniques to study microfinance rest on the
pretence of knowledge (Hayek, 1989, Nobel
lecture). The field requires other disciplines -
anthropology, sociology, social psychology and
even philosophy.
23The way forward for microfinance research
- Now that even Esther Duflos has discovered the
power of hope (watch http//www.youtube.com/wat
ch?vQxKdc8snnlw Duflo talking about the Lack of
Hope and the Persistence of Poverty ) - techniques like
- Positive psychology (Seligman, Learned Optimism,
1991) - Appreciative enquiry method, (Stowell and West.
1991) where they talk of discover, dream, design,
and deliver - Rational Reconstruction of Society(James
Coleman, 1992) and the - Positive Organisation School (Cameron, Dutton and
Quinn, 2003) - need to be used for more useful and meaningful
research.
24Thank You
- vijaymahajan_at_basixindia.com