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Lecture Micro financing and micro leasing - An Introduction - Lecture 7

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Consumer lenders come to BOP finance from a very different angle than most microfinance institutions. While microfinance began with credit for the owners of tiny informal businesses, consumer lenders began by helping salaried workers buy things. Today, especially in Latin America, the two approaches are starting to meet and compete.

Summary • Who serves the market? WHO SERVES THE BOP MARKET—AND WHO DOESN’T? Microfinance Institutions • From tiny nonprofit beginnings in the 1970s and 1980s, microfinance has become a significant global force that increasingly operates as part of the financial sector Microfinance Institutions • According to the Microfinance Information Exchange (MIX), the data custodian for the microfinance community, the 1,330 microfinance institutions that report to it lend to 57 million people worldwide Microfinance Institutions • The Microcredit Summit, an advocacy organization, casts a wider net, including quasiformal providers like self-help group movements and some public-sector development banks Microfinance Institutions • Its 2007 report records 133 million active borrowers in 3,316 microfinance institutions Microfinance Institutions • ACCION International, as a promoter and developer of microfinance institutions, has come to inclusive finance through the microfinance movement Microfinance Institutions • There are good reasons to learn from and connect with microfinance, in addition to the fact that it already reaches tens of millions of clients Microfinance Institutions • First, leading microfinance institutions show how inclusive finance can be profitable Consider Mibanco in Peru Most of its 250,000 clients are women, including Delia, profiled in the previous Lecture Microfinance Institutions • For clients like Delia, Mibanco provides a full suite of services including Micapital (working capital for her shop), Micasa (which helped her build the rooms she rents), and Chasqui (a fast-cash loan named after the swift-running messengers of the Inca Empire) Consumer Lenders • In contrast, microfinance institutions begin with a social bottom line They are more likely than consumer lenders to reach poorer clients, and especially the selfemployed Their intent is to better the lives of their clients Consumer Lenders • Financial return is valued primarily because it enables scale and staying power MFIs don’t treat profit as an end in itself Some MFIs with a strong antipoverty orientation keep interest rates close to the break-even level, as advocated by Grameen Bank’s Muhammad Yunus Consumer Lenders • With its nonprofit origins, microfinance has not yet had access to the sophisticated technologies that have enabled consumer lenders to reach scale Nevertheless, MFIs have a deep understanding of BOP customers and can fit microfinance products to their needs Consumer Lenders • That know-how underpins an impressive worldwide body of institutions, including some commercial microfinance banks and finance companies that are attracting great interest among investors Consumer Lenders • Compartamos Banco in Mexico and Equity Bank in Kenya, for instance, have had successful public offerings Consumer Lenders • Many leaders in microfinance worry about how to engage with the mainstream financial sector They want the technology and financial backing the private sector can bring, but also want to ensure that if they turn over their know-how or clients, they won’t be sacrificing the social commitment that has driven and inspired them Consumer Lenders • This difference in perspective between consumer lenders and microfinance sets up one of the most interesting dynamics at play in inclusive finance Consumer Lenders • Particularly in Latin America, consumer lenders are specifically targeting core microfinance clients—informal microentrepreneurs—while some (though not all) microfinance institutions are developing consumer lending products Consumer Lenders • To a client, the providers may look similar Both may offer a loan of approximately the same size, maturity, and interest rate Consumer Lenders • Such competition has not yet developed in other regions but may be coming soon In India, the recent growth of both microcredit for the poor and consumer finance for the middle class has been astonishing Consumer Lenders • The border between the two segments, previously far from one another, may soon blur and then disappear Consumer Lenders • Prospective new entrants into the inclusive finance sector will need to evaluate the behavior and positioning of the microfinance and consumer lending subsegments in their countries before making their own moves Consumer Lenders • As I consider the future of inclusive finance, I wonder how the energy, resources, and mastery of technology of the consumer lenders can be married to the deep knowledge about and concern for low-income customers that microfinance brings I would love to help match-make such a marriage Summary • WHO SERVES THE BOP MARKET— AND WHO DOESN’T? Next Lecture • FOUR CRITICAL CHALLENGES IN THE BOP MARKET ... of the financial sector Microfinance Institutions • According to the Microfinance Information Exchange (MIX), the data custodian for the microfinance community, the 1,330 microfinance institutions... promoter and developer of microfinance institutions, has come to inclusive finance through the microfinance movement Microfinance Institutions • There are good reasons to learn from and connect... rents), and Chasqui (a fast-cash loan named after the swift-running messengers of the Inca Empire) Microfinance Institutions • In 20 07, Mibanco had a loan portfolio of $500 million, with an average

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