1 / 25

Financial Inclusion and Responsible Micro-Finance In Focus : Credit Infrastructure

Financial Inclusion and Responsible Micro-Finance In Focus : Credit Infrastructure A Presentation By A K Srivastava, CGM, NABARD. Degree of Exclusion & Required Services. VISION 2012. Financial Inclusion of all RHH (11.15 cr) –2015(50% by 2012).

marah-casey
Télécharger la présentation

Financial Inclusion and Responsible Micro-Finance In Focus : Credit Infrastructure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Financial Inclusion and Responsible Micro-Finance In Focus : Credit Infrastructure A Presentation By A K Srivastava, CGM, NABARD

  2. Degree of Exclusion & Required Services

  3. VISION 2012 • Financial Inclusion of all RHH (11.15 cr) –2015(50% by 2012). • Financial Inclusion to precede Poverty Alleviation. • Financial Services within 15 minutes walk of RHH - Last mile client should be able to use POS/ Smart Card/ Mobile • RBI Working Group recommendation - A banking outlet in each village with population of 2000 and above, before March 2011. • Smart KCC/ GCC/ SCC to all eligible One Citizen One Card.

  4. Cash flow in no- frill a/c thru’ Innovative Credit products Micro Insurance Innovation – An Approach to Inclusive Growth • Micro Insurance/ Pension • Emi based loan Products • Loans to dependents of wage earners • Getting income from business thru’ banks • Thrift/ Saving by Vulnerable population Increased awareness & Financial Literacy interventions • Empowerment thru saving • Power of compounding • Risk mitigation • Opportunities for dependents • Break the poverty chain • Support economic growth of country

  5. Inclusion Process through KCC, SCC & MFIs - Status in lakh

  6. Outreach of Banks including RRBs * In Rs. Thousand as on Mar 2008,

  7. Other Infrastructure –Coop. & MFI • DCCBs / PACS : 12500/ 97000 • MFIs - > 800 • Sa Dhan affiliated 233 • MFIs - Client outreach >2 Cr • NB SHG/MFI Client outreach > 8.60 Cr • MFI loan portfolio 11700 Cr • Large – MFIs ( O/S portfolio>50 Cr) 28

  8. General Perceptions - USPs of micro-Finance by MFIs and Concerns USPs • Small size loans without collateral • No insistence on specific purpose • On occasion, combined with hand holding & capacity building • Hassle free (ease of access) and usually door delivery model (local touch) Concerns • High rate of interest/high cost of delivery of micro-credit • Lack of prudential norms in accounting • Lack of transparency/uniformity/supervision issues • Indiscriminate lending without past record scrutiny • Recovery not linked to cash flow from asset

  9. Category March 31, 2006 March 31, 2007 March 31, 2008* March 31, 2009* Public Sector Banks 3,32,878 58,65,419 1,39,09,935 2,98,59,178 Private Sector Banks 1,56,388 8,60,997 18,45,869 31,24,101 Foreign Banks 231 5,919 33,115 41,482 Total 4,89,497 67,32,335 1,57,88,919 3,30,24,761 Inclusion through 'No frills' A/c by Banks * Provisional

  10. FIF and FITF - Funding Status Rs Crore Contribution : GoI : RBI : NB in the ratio 40 : 40 : 20 * RBI Contribution to be received on reimbursement basis. @ GoI has been requested to release the amount $ Amount sanctioned under FIF – Rs. 17.98 crore and under FITF – Rs. 7.48 crore

  11. NABARD-UNDP Collaboration for FI Rajasthan UP Bihar MP Jharkhand Chattisgarh Orissa

  12. NABARD support for Financial Inclusion • As per the recommendations of Committee on Financial Inclusion, two funds viz., • Financial Inclusion Fund (FIF) • Financial Inclusion Technology Fund (FITF) created with NABARD with corpus of Rs. 500 crores each, to be contributed 40:40:20 by GoI, RBI &NB • Guidelines for FIF and FITF are issued to banks. • Advisory Board for FIF and FITF has been constituted. • Sub-Committee has been constituted under FITF. • State / District level workshops on Financial inclusion conducted for Stakeholders. • National Conference on Financial Inclusion One Citizen One Card.

  13. Financial Inclusion Fund i. Funding support for capacity building inputs to BF/BC ii. Providing promotional support to institutions such as Resource Centres, Farmers’ Service Centres and Rural Development and Self Employment Training Institutes to enable them to provide improved tech.& financial services iii. Providing funding support for promotion, nurturing and credit linking of SHGs; iv. Capacity building of personnel of NABARD, Banks, Post Offices, State Government Departments, MFIs/ NGOs/ Local Level Associations, members of SHGs / JLG etc. v. Defraying expenses of approved institutions for undertaking interventions for financial inclusion in high excluded Regions/ States

  14. Financial Inclusion Fund (cont) vi. Funding support for setting up of Rural Credit Bureaus and Credit Rating of Rural Customers; vii. Supporting initiatives of local level associations/ federations viii. Supporting pilot projects for development of innovative products, processes and prototypes for financial inclusion; ix. Any other developmental and promotional interventions recommended by the Advisory Board for the FIF.

  15. Financial Inclusion Technology Fund 1. Encouraging user friendly technology solutions; 2. Providing financial support to technological solutions aimed at providing affordable financial services to the disadvantaged ; 3. Creating a common technology infrastructure with comprehensive credit information; 4. Funding support to technologies facilitating the documentation for processing of loans; 5. Providing viability gap / pilot project funding for unproven but potential technological interventions; 6. Conduct of studies, consultancies, research, evaluation studies relating to technological interventions for financial inclusion;

  16. FITF (cont) 7. Promoting seminars, conferences and other mechanisms for discussions, dissemination relating to financial inclusion technological interventions; 8. Publication of financial inclusion technology literature, publicity material, etc.; 9. Capacity building of personnel of banks, Post Offices, State Government Departments,MFIs, NGOs, VAs and other stakeholders; and 10. Any other activity as may be approved by the Advisory Board.

  17. Approaches under FITF • Viability Gap Funding • Integrate with proposed Unique Identification Card of GoI • Integrated approach of Financial Inclusion - Projects involving micro insurance schemes- life/asset/accident/ health etc. • Proposed support mechanism for Card based project

  18. Approaches under FIF • Financial Literacy Drive • Exposure visits/ workshop of stakeholders • Certification Program for BC/ BF • Proposed support mechanism for Farmers’ Club as BF • Sensitization programme through training establishment Financial Literacy Financial Prudence Understanding Financial Product Financial Market Financial Analysis Financial Empowerment Financial Decision Making Financial Well being

  19. Approaches under UNDP • Exposure visits/ workshop of stakeholders • On the Spot loan appraisal/ sanction/ rating evaluation through Mobile van system • Partnership with reputed and experienced NGOs • Financial Literacy • Resource Centre • Community Radio Service • Audio/ Visual display

  20. New Dimensions of Credit Infrastructure • Need for Information sharing -necessary to avoid over indebtedness -control client delinquency -financial services to non resident migrants • How ? - Formal Credit Bureau - Informal information sharing on regional basis - Motivational issues for information sharing

  21. Way Forward and Emerging Challenges • Need for Credit Bureau –Yes , possibly thro’ • Resource Centres at Local level (Block /Panchayat) • Integration with Common Services Centre • State level Federation (initially in select States) • Risks - Collateral coming into play, - Exclusion thro’ black listing, - Poaching among MFIs

  22. Way Forward and Emerging Challenges (cont) • Credit Guarantee – Is it needed ? - Requirement- Registration, Supervision of loan portfolio of MFIs - Application of prudential Norms - Loss of informal character “If Yes, to be linked to Rating of MFI and compliance with Credit Bureau Requirements” • Issues - Policy formulation / funding-sharing arrangement / management / operation / regulatory framework / viability of scheme

  23. Issues of Effective Outreach • Viability / Cost of delivery - BC/ BF (door delivery model) - MFI • - Bank / Branches • Involvement of MFI sector for FI • Increased participation of Coop. - issue taken up with RBI • Support and linkage of financial services to Govt payments- NREGA/ SS Pensions • Projects/ proposals through Bank – RBI • Open Standards for Technology • Innovative Financial Literacy Drive

  24. FI - Road map for Institutions MFIs/ NGOs Banks/ Co-ops/ RRBs BC/ BF Financial Counselling/ Literacy Micro Credit/ Saving Loan/ Credit A/c BC/ BF Saving A/c Financial Inclusion Payment & Remittances Stand Alone Insurance Remittances Postal Savings Post Offices Insurance Cos

  25. THANK YOU

More Related