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Fundamentals of Microfinance

Fundamentals of Microfinance. Presentation by: Maria Kristina S. Galvez Project Manager – Social Enterprise Unit Punla sa Tao Foundation. Presentation Outline. Where Did It All Began: The Grameen Bank The Philippine Financial System Philippine Microfinance Profile

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Fundamentals of Microfinance

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  1. Fundamentals of Microfinance Presentation by: Maria Kristina S. Galvez Project Manager – Social Enterprise Unit Punlasa Tao Foundation

  2. Presentation Outline • Where Did It All Began: The Grameen Bank • The Philippine Financial System • Philippine Microfinance Profile • Process and Procedure: How Does Microfinance Work? • Impact Assessment: Does Microfinance Really Work? Microfinance and the Financial Crisis

  3. Why the poor cannot borrow from other formal financial institutions? Can the poor really pay or save?

  4. An Economist Like YOU! Dr. Mohammad Yunus Founder, Grameen Bank Noble Peace Prize Winner, 2006

  5. Yunus and the Grameen Bank • Grameen means “village” – thus, Village Banking • Envisioned as the “biggest development wonder” • Extended banking facilities to poor men and women • Aimed to create opportunities for self-employment in rural Bangladesh

  6. Grameen Framework From “low income, low saving & low investment“ into "low income, injection of credit, investment, more income, more savings, more investment, more income".

  7. The Philippine Financial System

  8. Microfinance 101 Defined as provision of financial services, savings and credit to the poor on a sustainable basis. Credit Savings Other Financial Services (ex. Insurance)

  9. Dual Objectives of Microfinance Serve the poor or reduce poverty while at the same time Pursue the business to maximize return on investments

  10. Players in the Philippine MF Industry

  11. Major Providers of MF Services • NGOs – 500 • Rural Banks – 195 • Savings and Credit Cooperatives – 4,579 Source: GTZ-PhilHealth Orientation for Microfinance

  12. Who Are the Clients of MF? Near Poor E-Poor Laboring Ultra- Poor Entrepreneurial Poor or “e-poor”

  13. Status of Microfinance in the Philippines 17 million people still do not have access to financing services Source: National Anti-Poverty Commission, 2005

  14. Preparing for Microfinance Process, Approach and Methodologies

  15. Methodologies in MF Group Lending • Around 5-30 members per group • Members guarantee each other’s loan Example: Grameen methodology

  16. Methodologies in MF Individual Lending • Loans are given based on the capacity to pay (Household or Business Cash Flow) • With collateral or co-maker • Clients are screened for credit checks or character references • Loan size are tailored to business needs.

  17. Methodologies in MF

  18. Microfinance Products and Services • Credit • Savings Compulsory Savings Voluntary Savings • Insurance Death Insurance Health Insurance • Payment Services • Agricultural Microfinance

  19. Loan Documentation Client Orientation Credit/Background Investigation 1 Loan Review and Approval Collection Disbursement Processing Microfinance Process Flow

  20. Understanding the MF Loan • Small loans granted to borrowers based on cash flow • Given to increase income levels, for small enterprises

  21. Understanding the MF Loan • Amount starts from Php 2,000 to Php 5,000 and maximum principal amount pegged at Php150,000 • Equivalent to the maximum capitalization of a microenterprise (under RA 8425) Source: Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas

  22. Costs of a Microfinance Loan • Direct Costs • Costs of Funds for lending • Cost of Risk (Loan Loss) • Administrative Costs • Expand Capital Base • Indirect Costs • Staff Salaries • Other Operating expenses

  23. Interest on Microfinance Loans • Old Approach – subsidized interest rates • New Approach – market-based interest rates The new approach permits the microfinance institution to cover the costs in lending a loan, thus making it sustainable. Interests at MFIs are currently at 2% - 3% per month

  24. Commercial Banks vs. MFIs • Commercial banks deal with large loans therefore their transaction costs are lower. • Government-owned MFIs are also lower because of political considerations. • Some MFIs charge very low rates (ex. 20% per annum), but incur losses. Losses are recovered through subsidies.

  25. Lower Interest Rates, Healthier Credit Environment A “win-win” proposition: more microcredit lent and gross returns to lenders.

  26. What Should the Government Do? Government should continually seek consultation with MFIs to understand better the infrastructure bottlenecks they face. The government should not lend, rather make an enabling environment for lending.

  27. Does Microfinance Really Work? Studies and Evidences

  28. The MF Yin-Yang

  29. ADB Study Reveals… • Majority of existing clients and new clients are not poor according to the official definition. • No significant impact on household assets and human capital investments. • For microfinance to be an effective poverty-alleviation tool, beneficiaries must be identified correctly. Source: Kondo, Toshio (2007) Impact of Microfinance on Rural Household in the Philippines, ADB

  30. Is MF spared from the Financial Crisis? • Asian Financial Crisis : Banking and currency crises had little relevance to subsistence-based economies in closed ecosystem markets • Money will become more scarce, more conservative, and more costly. • Financial pressures on families may lead to less savings and more withdrawals.

  31. For MF to Shield Itself… Risk Management, Good Governance and Shift to More Enterprising Environment for Clients!

  32. Thoughts to Ponder in Microfinance • Maybe necessary, but not sufficient as a poverty-alleviation tool. • Microfinance should pay for itself to reach more poor people. • The role of the government is to enable financial services, not to provide them.

  33. Solidarity in Microfinance

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