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How to measure microfinance impact on poverty alleviation: what does available evidence tell us?

How to measure microfinance impact on poverty alleviation: what does available evidence tell us?. Some Lessons Emerging from Buusaa Gonofaa’s System of Tracking Improvements in Clients’ Livelihood By Teshome Dayesso, General Manager bgmfi@ethionet.et. Buusaa Gonofaa MFI - Introduction.

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How to measure microfinance impact on poverty alleviation: what does available evidence tell us?

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  1. How to measure microfinance impact on poverty alleviation: what does available evidence tell us? Some Lessons Emerging from Buusaa Gonofaa’s System of Tracking Improvements in Clients’ Livelihood By Teshome Dayesso, General Manager bgmfi@ethionet.et

  2. Buusaa Gonofaa MFI - Introduction • Started by a local NGO, HUNDEE, later transformed into NBFI in 1999, regulated by the central bank of Ethiopia • Provides micro credit and savings services through joint liability groups of 15-20 members; • Short term general-purpose loans (8 – 12 months) for income generating activities, microenterprises, farm inputs, productive assets (ox, cow), housing improvements, consumption smoothening • Community managed saving and credit facilities in hard-to-reach remote rural areas • Current outreach >50,000 active clients; total assets of >US $6 million; outstanding portfolio of US$5 million

  3. Buusaa Gonofaa MFI: Our Intentions • Mission:- To provide flexible & efficientmicrofinance service on a sustainable basis to improvethe livelihood of the resource poor, particularly women, landless youth & smallholder farmers Flexible & efficient Client satisfaction Sustainable/profitable Financial performance Outreach to target group – the poor Client profile, poverty level Progress overtime Improved livelihood

  4. Why BG Wanted Client Assessment Scorecard (or ‘Social Ledger’) • Double-bottom line: standardized measurement of financial sustainability; but tracking social goals relied on simple success stories, and intuitive decision making; but this was not enough and we wanted data ‘evidence’ to describe it. • With financial maturity, we wanted a more systematic way to understanding what is happening out there, • Whom do we reach? How poor are they? • Is there a change(+ve, -ve) in our clients’ livelihood? • Where do we succeed in changing client’s livelihood? Where do we fail? Why? • Who benefits from BG most? Does our loan assist either survivalists or entrepreneurial poor? Or both?

  5. Poverty as ‘lack’ and how the poor measure their progress (or improvements) in overcoming it • What the poor consider as progress or improvement • 25% - Expanding the business (ox/cow fattening, more inputs for farming) • 16% - Improvements to the house or house construction • 14% - Buying ox, cow, sheep • 13% Acquire basic household furniture, utensils • 13% Buying “luxuries” (radio-cassette, TV, jewellery, etc) What the poor ‘lack’ in comparison to the not-so-poor • Food security • Clothing • Shelter • Income • Education • Health • Housing ownership • Access to electricity, water • Land • Capital/savings

  6. BG’s Poverty Indicators & Score Weight 6

  7. Poverty category & cut-off points A person with total score of 5 is poorer than a person with score of 15, and vice versa Collection of data (scoring) from clients by LO as part of routine loan application on every cycle – baseline at Intake, wealth Scoring on each loan cycle 7

  8. Improvements in the poverty status of clients between the 1st and 3rd Scoring (N=2,113)

  9. Mean Score Growth by Components

  10. What contributed towards assets score growth?

  11. Some Emerging Lessons and conclusion • It is very important to know what matters most for our target groups – identification of indicators from the bottom up, thus relevant ‘evidence’ • The system provided us with good insight about what is happening ‘out there’ – more informed decision to better serve the very poor and poor; ‘evidence’ to refine our services and refocus on improvement areas that matter most for the target group • It would not tell us what loan size or mix of financial services are most likely to keep the poor healthy or enable them send their children to school; but it may help us in understanding how the poor might progress overtime towards those ideals of dignified living. • Our intention is to improve livelihoods; the target groups have diverse priorities and hence there is no single goal that can be measured with a single indicators. But the system complements our judgments and decisions and helps us to be mindful of our promises.

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