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This is the final post in the short series on microfinance in Russia. You can find the previous two posts here and here.
In the two previous blog posts on this topic, we wrote on the situation with exorbitant interest rates charged by a few Russian commercial lending companies calling themselves “microlenders” (though we prefer to label them “payday lenders”). We also shared suggestions from the Russian MFI community to the Russian regulatory authorities, which have been favorably received.
Certainly, Russia is not alone facing this issue; there are many other countries struggling with the question whether it is possible to draw a meaningful line between “justifiable” and “exploitative” interest rates – in other words, trying to answer the question “how much is too much?” The question has enormous political as well as operational relevance. In this final post of the series, we would like to explore the issue by going back to the basics of what can – and should – go into setting the price of a loan. Read the rest of this page »
by Tilman Ehrbeck : Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Over the past 15 years, the field that CGAP aspires to advance has broadened from the initial focus on microcredit to microfinance, to access-to-finance, and most recently financial inclusion. This evolution happened for good reasons as practitioners, donors, academics, and policymakers learned more about the financial needs of poor families in the informal economy, and success and scale in the early endeavors resulted in important learning and new frontiers. As a public good at these frontiers of a collective market development effort, CGAP continuously and purposefully influenced, shaped, and adapted to this evolution. Read the rest of this page »
by Chris Neidl : Monday, May 14, 2012
 A Negros Women For Tomorrow (NWTF) business development officer demonstrates the features of a solar portable lighting device during a group meeting in Palawan, the Philippines.
Offering financial products that enable poor clients to purchase clean, low-carbon alternatives to kerosene, firewood and other conventional fuels is perhaps the most direct way in which microfinance can be mobilized to combat climate change and preserve ecological resources.
Of course, from the perspective of a client who lacks access to modern energy, the appeal of alternatives like small-scale solar charging devices and efficient cookstoves, is not, nor likely ever will be, about cutting carbon. Fortunately, it doesn’t have to be. Energy poor households and businesses aspire for access to solutions that save them money and time, deliver superior and higher levels of service, facilitate new forms of work and leisure, and maximize convenience. This means that clean energy end-user finance is rooted in the immediate needs and preferences of clients, and therefore driven by bottom-up consumer demands rather than top-down appeals to environmental stewardship. Read the rest of this page »
The exorbitant interest rates offered by so-called “microlending” companies (who look much more like payday lenders or garden variety loan sharks) to clients of the Russian Post recently gave rise to a wave of indignation on the part of the public, government, mass media and the responsible microfinance industry.
Microlending has existed in Russia for 15 years but it was not until 2011 that special legislation came into force, providing for a clearer legal status of microlending MFIs. These institutions play an important role in the country, serving people who do not have access to bank loans. Thus, last year about 70 percent of microloans were disbursed in small towns and rural areas; 60 percent of microborrowers were women and 10 percent – youth; and about 50 percent of all microloans were used to fund micro and small businesses. The average annual interest rates charged by MFIs are about 28 percent per annum. Read the rest of this page »
When President Calderón of Mexico announced the creation of a National Council for Financial Inclusion, one of the first tasks he assigned was to ensure all financial data included statistics on financial inclusion:
“I would also like to urge the Minister of Treasury, in his capacity as Minister and as member of such Council, not to wait two or three years to conduct the financial inclusion surveys. … Every time the Minister receives financial information related to the country, there must be some financial inclusion data in it.”
We believe both policy making and private sector decision making is much improved when it is rooted in rigorous research and analysis. (In fact, rigor is one of the four values of The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation). Better evidence can improve outcomes in a number of ways: Read the rest of this page »
by Leora Klapper : Wednesday, April 25, 2012
What percentage of women in South Asia have a formal account compared to those in Latin America? What are the most common self-reported barriers to financial inclusion among women and rural residents worldwide? To what degree has mobile money reached the unbanked in Sub-Saharan Africa?
For the first time, we have hard data to evaluate how women and rural residents around the world save, borrow, make payments and manage risk both inside and outside the formal financial sector. With the release of the Global Financial Inclusion (Global Findex) Database we now have a comprehensive, individual-level, and publicly-available database that allows for comparisons across 148 economies. Women and rural residents make up more than 75 percent of the sample of the first round of the Global Findex database, based on more than 150,000 nationally representative adults in 148 economies.
Gender and rural gaps are persistent in all developing economies
With over 40 indicators, and the ability to differentiate each one by gender and rural or urban residence as well as age, education, and income, one can easily get lost in the nuance. But let’s start with the broad strokes. According to the data, in developing economies, 37% of women versus 46% of men are banked.
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Thanks to the launch of the Global Findex data set, based on nationally representative surveys of more than 150,000 adults in 148 economies, we have a fresh and robust answer to that question—approximately 2.5 billion adults lack a formal bank account. Most of these people are concentrated in developing economies.
Figure 1
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by David Roodman : Wednesday, April 11, 2012
The most rapidly obsolescing part of my book, Due Diligence, is chapter 6, which reviews the statistical evidence of the impact of microfinance on poverty. Since I put the text to bed, working papers have appeared that test microcredit in Mongolia and Bosnia & Herzegovina and microsavings in Malawi and Chile (though the latter is marked “do not cite or circulate”). There’s also the Morocco microcredit study, which I didn’t catch wind of until too late in the book production. Add all these to the trials of microcredit in India and the Philippines and of microsavings in Kenya—the one that initiated this wave of research in 2009—and we have five credit studies and three savings ones. Read the rest of this page »
A micro-borrower in the Philippines struggles to figure out which one of several loans is the least expensive—one comes with a flat charge, another a weekly interest rate, and still another a monthly rate with an upfront deduction. In Senegal, a recent survey of low-income consumers revealed that more than 99% of respondents were unaware of their right to standardized price information on the loan and deposit services they used. In Mexico, poorer consumers looking for a cheaper way to save, reported to CGAP losing 25%, 50%, or even their whole savings due to hidden fees on “low-balance” accounts they were not aware of until it was too late.
Consumer research supported by CGAP and others around the world is painting a similar picture – customers face many challenges in understanding the prices, terms and conditions of the financial services they use, and this lack of understanding carries very real economic consequences. Even if consumers are fortunate enough to have multiple options for loans, savings or payments services, many find it very difficult to “shop around” and identify the option that offers the best value-for-money. Sometimes the problem is the opposite, when excessive fine print floods consumers with too much information and distracts them from the factors that are most important for their decisions—factors such as total finance charges. Read the rest of this page »
by Erin Scronce : Wednesday, April 4, 2012
Normally when we think of microfinance, we think of projects taking place in far-off places in the developing world. But that’s not always the case. I have been reading a slew of great stories recently about college microfinance clubs in the United States getting involved with microfinance – both abroad and in their own neighborhoods.
The recession in the US certainly spurred students to action, with 12 campus organizations making up a national network called the Campus Microfinance Alliance and as a result helping hundreds of people across the country start small businesses. The Madison Fund, based in Madison, WI and one of the Alliance’s members, is one campus organization that goes beyond simply providing small entrepreneurial loans – its members also recognize that guidance for clients is a key to success. Read the rest of this page »
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