ROLE OF MICROCREDIT IN THE ERADICATION OF
POVERTY -Report of the Secretary-General
Summary
The present
report has been prepared in response to a request contained in
General Assembly resolution 52/194 of 18 December 1997. This is the
first time the Secretary-General has been requested to prepare a
report on the question of microcredit and the eradication of
poverty. The prominence given to the matter reflects the recent
success of small-scale lending programmes such as the Grameen Bank
of Bangladesh. These rely on lending (usually a few hundred dollars)
to small enterprises in agriculture, distribution, crafts, trading
and similar activities. The participatory nature of thes projects,
together with the emphasis on women entrepreneurs and employment
creation, have raised hopes of reducing poverty through this
approach.
The present report surveys current experience and highlights the
strengths and weakness of the microcredit approach, including the
administrative difficulties and limited linkages with other services
for the poor. The report also contains suggestions for strengthening
operations, and makes a particular plea for ensuring that
microcredit projects are established in a broader context of support
to the small enterprise sector. Responsibilities of donor countries
in this regard are emphazised.
Finally, the report highlights the activities of the United
Nations system and non-governmental organizations in support of
microcredit, giving special emphasis to the World Bank-led
Consultative Group to Assist the Poorest.
CONTENTS paragraphs
- I. Introduction 1-3
- II. Role of microcredit in poverty eradication 4-40
- A. Microcredit and poverty eradication 5-7
- B. Characteristics and recent successes of microcredit
programmes 8-25
- C. Recent developments of international institutions 26-31
- D. Towards stronger support to small enterprises 32-40
- III.International support to microcredit lending 41-61
- A. United Nations 42-52
- B. United Nations funds and programmes 53-56
- C. Specialized agencies of the United Nations 57-61
I. Introduction
1. The objective of the First United Nations Decade for the
Eradication of Poverty (1997-2006), proclaimed by the General
Assembly in its resolution 50/107 or 20 December 1995, is to achieve
the goal of eradicating absolute poverty through national action and
international cooperation. Progress on the anti-poverty front was
last reported to the General Assembly in the report to the
Secretary-General entitled "Observance of the International Year for
the Eradication of Poverty (1996) and recommendations for the rest
of the Decade" (A/52/573). An updated report on the Decade has been
prepared for the current session.
2. The General Assembly, in its resolution 52/194 of 18 December
1997, noted that, in many countries microcredit programmes have
proved to be an effective tool in freeing people from poverty and
have helped to increase their participation in the economic and
political processes of society. Among other provisions, the Assembly
called upon the relevant organs, organizations and bodies of the
United Nations system, in particular its funds and programmes and
the regional commissions, as well as relevant international and
regional financial institutions and donor agencies involved in the
eradication of poverty, to explore including the microcredit
approach in their programmes as a tool for the eradication of
poverty. The assembly requested the Secretary-General, in
collaboration with relevant organizations of the United Nations
system, including funds and programmes and the World Bank, to submit
to it at its fifty-third session a report on the role of microcredit
in the eradication of poverty.
3. The World Summit for Social Development, held in Copenhagen in
March 1995, also underlined the importance of improving access to
credit for small rural or urban producers, landless farmers and
other people with low or no income, with special attention to the
needs of women and disadvantaged and vulnerable groups. Governments
were called upon to review national legal, regulatory and
institutional frameworks that restrict the access of people living
in poverty, especially women, to credit on reasonable terms; to
promoting realistic targets for access to affordable credit,
providing incentives for improving access to and strengthening the
capacity of organized credit systems to deliver credit and related
services to people living in poverty and vulnerable groups; and to
expanding financial networks, building on existing networks,
promoting attactive opportunities for savings and ensuring equitable
access to credit at the local level (1).
II. Role of microcredit in poverty
eradication
4. This is the first time that the Secretary-General has been
requested to report to the General Assembly on the subject of
microcredit. In the broader context of the international fight
against poverty, the paper highlights the strengths and weaknesses
of the microlending approach, from which some conclusions about the
future course of action are drawn. The report, as requested by the
General Assembly, provides information from United Nations funds,
programmes and agencies on their actions especially in the field.
A. Microcredit and poverty eradication
5. Since the World Summit for Social Development the priority
given to poverty eradication has grown. As stated in the previous
report of the Secretary-General on the eradication of poverty
(A/52/573), it is now broadly accepted that robust economic growth
that is labour-intensive and equitable, combined with larger outlays
of social expenditures, especially directed towards the poor (now
estimated at 1,3 billion people), are a winning combination in the
fight against poverty.
6. Several factors have led to increased interest in microcredit
in promoting growth with greater equity. There has been a growth in
the recognition of the importance of empowering all people by
increasing their access to all the factors of production, including
credit. In addition, the value of the role of non-governmental
organizations in development is receiving more attention.
7. It is in that context that microcredit has recently assumed a
certain degree of prominence. It is based on the recognition that
the latent capacity of the poor for entrepreneurship would be
encouraged with the availability of small-scale loans and would
introduce them to the small-enterprise sector. This could allow them
to be more self-reliant, create employment opportunities, and, not
least, engage women in economically productive activities.
Currently, there are estimated to be about 3,000 microfinance
institutions in developing countries. These institution also help
create deeper and more widespread financial markets in those
countries.
B. Characteristics and recent successes of microcredit
programmes
8. Informal and small-scale lending arrangements have long
existed in many parts of the world, especially in the rural areas,
and they still survive. Good examples are schemes in Ghana, Kenya,
Malawi and Nigeria ("merry-go-rounds", "esusus" etc.). They provide
the rural population with access to savings within the local area
and with a certain cushion against economic fluctuations, and they
encourage a cooperative and community feeling. The groups formed
provide joint collateral and serve as instruments for spreading
valuable information that is useful for economic and social
progress.
9. All economies rely upon the financial intermediary function to
transfer resources from savers to investors. In market economies,
this function is performed by commercial banks and the capital
markets. More widespread financial intermediation, as well as
increasing depth and variety, are a hallmark of advancing
development. But in many developing countries, capital markets are
still at a rudimentary stage, and commercial banks are reluctant to
lend to the poor largely because of the lack of collateral and high
transaction costs. The poor would borrow relatively small amounts,
and the processing and supervision of lending to them would consume
administrative costs that would be disproportionate to the amount of
lending. A study by the International Fund for Agricultural
Development (IFAD) has confirmed that complicated loan procedures
and paperwork, combined with a lack of accounting experience, limit
poor people's access to formal sources of credit. Other reports cite
the fact that commercial lenders in rural areas prefer to deal
mainly with large-scale farmers.
10. The absence of commercial banks has led to non-conventional
forms of lending. The recent prominence given to microcredit owes
much to the success of a relatively few microcredit programmes and
their increasing scale. The Grameen Bank of Bangladesh, the most
prominent of the successes, now reaches over 2 million people, with
cumulative lending of about $2.1 billion. Similar successful
examples are known in Latin America (e.g., Banco Solidario in
Bolivia), less so in Africa (the Kenya Rural Enterprise Programme is
a good example). Progress has also been recorded in several
transition economies, mixed in some cases. Such institutions have
not only achieved a degree of success, but they have also managed to
attract donor support and press attention.
11. These schemes are characterized by relatively small loans, a
few hundred dollars at most. The repayment period is relatively
short, about a year or so. Women are a major beneficiary of their
activities, and the destination of the funds primarily includes
agriculture, distribution, trading, small craft and processing
industries. The administrative structure is generally light and the
entire process is participatory in nature. The impact of microcredit
lending varies widely between rural areas and urban areas.
12. In many developing countries, overall interest rates are
relatively high to begin with, so that rates charged by microlending
schemes are quite high when the risk premium is added. Many of these
micro-institutions claim a high rate of repayment. This is
attributable to the informal participatory structures, which create
an atmosphere in which debtors respect their obligations. While this
phenomenon is certainly true of the better-run institutions, it is
not possible to verify whether this is a universal feature. There is
little by way of "global" research in this area, even though the
literature on microcredit has proliferated in recent years.
13. It should be noted that although a large number of studies
undertaken so far on the impact of microcredit programmes on
household income show that participants of such programmes usually
have higher and more stable incomes than they did before they joined
the programmes, some practitioners still have reservations about the
findings of those studies. Moreover, not many microcredit programmes
can afford to undertake impact assessments because they are
generally expensive and time-consuming. There are serious
disagreements among experts on the valididyof methodologies used in
some of the published studies. In some cases, even the more rigorous
studies have produced inconclusive results. Some studies show that
there are limits to the use of credit as an instrument for poverty
eradication, including difficulties in identifying the poor and
targeting credit to reach the poorest of the poor. Added to this is
the fact that many people, especially the poorest of the poor, are
usually not in a position to undertake an economic activity, partly
because they lack business skills and even the motivation for
business.
14. Furthermore, it is not clear if the extent to which
microcredit has spread, or can potentially spread, can make a major
dent in global poverty. The actual use of this kind of lending, so
far at least, is rather modest: the overall portfolio of the World
Bank, for example, is only $218 million. In recent international
meetings, it has been stated that a target to reach 100 million
families by the year 2005 would require an additional annual outlay
of about $2,5 billion. This should be compared to the total gross
domestic product (GDP) of all developing countries, which is now
about $6 trillion. A certain sense of proportion regarding
microcredit would seem to be in order.
15. In addition, the administrative structures governing these
institutions are commonly either fragile or rudimentary, and often
involve large transaction costs. A study by the Organisation for
Economic Cooperation an Development (OECD), for example, found that
many specialized agricultural institutions were not designed to
serve as financial intermediaries. The success of financial
intermediation at any time depends significantly on how efficiently
the transaction is completed. If the transaction costs, combined
with high interest rates, require that the operation in question
generate profit margins of the order of 30 to 50 per cent, it is not
clear that this would be economically beneficial. It is not
surprising that in many microlending operations, trading activity -
with quick turnover and large profit margins - dominates.
16. In many cases, microcredit programmes have been stand-alone
operations. There is now considerable consensus that lending to the
poor can succeed provided it is accompanied by other services,
especially training, information and access to land. An OECD study,
for example, emphasized that credit needs to be supplemented with
access to land and appropriate technology. But such activities
require strong support from the public sector. In some of the
lowest-income countries, lack of access to land is the most critical
single cause of rural poverty, which dominates the poverty situation
in those countries. Yet, few countries have substantial land reform
programmes.
17. Moreover, in the proliferation of microlending institutions,
non-governmental organizations and foreign donors have played an
increasing role. Non-governmental organizations vary in quality and
strength. The best results are produced, research shows, when
developing country Governments and non-governmental organizations
work hand in hand. While donor participation can be positive, it
should be noted that total official development assistance (ODA) has
declined in recent years.
Recent development
18. Over the past decade, microfinance institutions have adopted
innovative ways of providing credit and savings services to the
entrepreneurial poor. Two approaches have been advocated on the role
of credit in poverty reduction. While supporters of the
income-generation approach maintain that credit should be provided
mainly to the entrepreneurial poor to enable them to finance
specific private income-generating activities to increase their
revenues, proponents of the so-called new minimalist approach argue
that credit progammes would still be helping the poor fight poverty
by giving credit to any poor person who is able to repay a loan
without dictating to that person how and on what the loan should be
used. Some studies have pointed out that the problem of the
non-productive use of credit, as advocated by the minimalist
approach, lies in the fact that by consuming rather than investing
their loans, the actions of such borrowers, if imitated by other
poor people, could produce a negative impact on the future growth of
microcredit.
19. Several microfinance institutions have succeeded in reaching
the poorest of the poor by devising innovative strategies. These
include the provision of small loans to poor people, especially in
rural areas, at full-cost interest rates, without collateral, that
are repayable in frequent instalments. Borrowers are organized into
groups, which reduces the risk of default. These are also effective
mechanisms through which to disseminate valuable information on ways
to improve the health, legal rights, sanitation and other relevant
concerns of the poor. Above all, many microcredit programmes have
targeted one of the most vulnerable groups in society - women who
live in households that own little or no assets. By providing
opportunities for self-employment, many studies have concluded that
these programmes have significantly increased women's security,
autonomy, self-confidence and status within the household.
Asia
20. Microlending has progressed to the greates extent in the
Asian region. An innovative approach that has been used successfully
by Grameen Bank's credit-delivery system is "peer-group monitoring"
to reduce lending risk, although some studies have suggested that
the reason for the Grameen Bank's high repayment rates is also
partly due to the practice of weekly public meetings - at which
attendance is compulsory - for the repayment of loan instalments and
the collection of savings. It is reported that the meetings
reinforce a culture of discipline, routine repayments and staff
accountability. Not all microfinance institutions use peer-group
monitoring. Other institutions such as the Bank Rakyat of Indonesia,
which serves 2.5 million clients and 12 million small savers, rely
on character references and locally recruited lending agents in
place of physical collateral.
21. Thailand's Bank of Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives
serves approximately 1 million microborrowers and 3.6 million
micro-savers. Newcomers such as the Association for Social
Advancement of Bangladesh, with half a million clients, and the
People's Credit Funds of Viet Nam, with more than 200,000 members or
clients, are other examples of the potential for growth in the
industry. Other institutions such as the Association of Cambodia
Local Economic Development Agencies, Buro-Tangail of Bangladesh, the
Self-Employed Women's Association Bank of India, and Amanah Ikhtiar
Malaysia are also reported to be making good progress.
22. Various institutions are involved in the delivery of
microfinance services. They include formal commercial banks, rural
banks, cooperative institutions, credit unions and non-governmental
organizations. Their methods of doing business range from Grameen
Bank-style solidarity groups and institutions dealing with
individual clients to self-managed self-help groups. Reports
indicate that some institutions have gone beyond credit to offer
insurance and other financial services. Both the Grameen Bank and
the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee offer non-financial
services, such as retail outlet facilities for products of their
clients.
Latin America
23. In Latin America, Accion Internacional, a non-profit
development agency, and its affiliates was reported to have
disbursed in the past five years $1 billion in loans to poor
microentrepreneurs. Its first-time loans are between $100 and $200,
and the overall repayment rate is above 98 per cent. Its network of
19 affiliates in Latin America and North America provides $300
million a year in loans to poor entrepreneurs (56 per cent of whom
are women). Since 1987, Accion's network has grown from 13,000 to
more than 285,000 active borrower clients. The six largest
affiliates now provide $1 million per month in loans. Banco
Solidario of Bolivia, which has grown from a credit-providing
non-governmental organization to a fully licensed commercial bank,
provides financial services to 67,000 people, more than one half of
the total number of clients in the entire Bolivian banking system.
The Association for the Development of Micro-Entreprises of the
Dominican Republic and Accion Comunitaria del Peru are reported to
have achieved sustainability.
Africa
24. In West Africa, where microfinance institutions are still in
their infancy, a World Bank case study of nine microfinance
programmes - the Pride, Credit rural and credit mutuel de Guinee;
Credit mutuel du Senegal and Village Banks Nganda of Senegal; Reseau
des caisses populaires and Sahel Action Project de promotion du
petit credit rural of Burkina Faso; and Caisses villageoises du pays
dogon and Kafo Jiginew of Mali - concluded that all nine of these
programmes are very much in the mainstream of best practice in the
field of microfinance. In terms of sustainable lending to
microentrepreneurs, the study gave high marks to the programmes on
the following basis: all nine programmes are located near their
clients and in the largest catchment areas possible; they use
lending technologies that are simple, well-tailored to the cultural
environment and inexpensive for both lender and client; they have
employed effective techniques for obtaining high repayment rates;
most include savings, which meet a critical need of many people, and
they price their loans far above commercial lending rates, though
not at full cost recovery.
25. A recent study of 11 major microentreprise finance programmes
- Agence de credit pour l'entreprise privee of Senegal, Asociacion
Dominicana para el Desarrollo de la Mujer of the Dominican Republic,
Banco Solidario of Bolivia, Badan Kredit Desa, Bank Rakyat Indonesia
and Lembaga Perkreditan Desas of Indonesia, Bankin Raya Karkara of
the Niger, Corporacion de Accion Solidaria of Colombia, Fondacion
Integral Campesina of Costa Rica, Grameen Bank of Bangladesh, and
the Kenya Rural Enterprise Programme - showed that 10 of the
programmes were operationally efficient. Five institutions were
fully profitable, generating inflation-adjusted positive returns on
assets. It was reported that, in 1993, the Agence de credit pour
l'entreprise privee of Senegal, Banco Solidario of Bolivia and
Lembaga Perkreditan Desas of Indenosia had covered 100, 103 and 137
per cent of their costs, respectively. In view of the growing
popularity of microfinance institutions, some of which now explore
the possibility of deposit mobilization or leverage commercial
capital, it is reported that bank regulators in such countries as
Bolivia, Ghana, Kenya and Peru, and other countries, are creating
laws or special regulations for this new breed of institutions. In
Bolivia, it is reported that Banco Solidario, a private commercial
microenterprise bank, is regulated by the Superintendency of Banks,
with the same financial and reporting requirements as traditional
banks, but with simpler loan documentation and risk classification
rules. In the case of Bolivia, which seeks to encourage new
microfinancial institutions, it is reported that the Government has
begun licensing a new class of intermediaries, known as private
financial funds, subject to the same solvency and reserve
requirements as banks, but with lower minimal capital requirements.
C. Recent developments of international institutions
26. One of the outcomes of recent discussion has indicated that a
more coodinated and concerted international effort is required if
microcredit is to spread and succeed on the scale that expectations
now require. It is with that perspective in mind that the World Bank
has led the process of international coordination primarily by
establishing the Consultative Group to Assist the Poorest (CGAP),
which brings together a number of western donor countries and
international agencies. The group has ancillary structures which
ensure that government organizations and borrowers in general are
consulted.
27. CGAP, which comprises 25 members, including United Nations
bodies, is a multi-donor effort to address the problems facing
microfinancing. The most important of thes are lack of access to
information, the measurement of loan delinquency, setting of
interest rates, designing lending procedures and developing business
projects. The objective of CGAP is to foster good donor practices,
including performance standards.
28. With regard to the level of funding to microcredit
institutions,in its first two-and-a-half-years, CGAP provided about
$18 million in grants to microfinance institutions and also
committed $400 million in the past three years to microfinance
activities. These are relatively modest amounts. Grants have been
made directly to institutions and networks of practitioners.
Eligibility criteria have included the following: (a) institutions
must serve more than 3,000 very poor clients, of which at least 50
per cent must be women; (b) institutions must be operationally
self-sufficient and on the path to financial self-sufficiency; and
(c) institutions must be on the path to mobilizing domestic
commercial resources.
29. An important positive development from the CGAP process is
that success stories and their characteristics are now much better
known. To spread these best microcredit practices to different parts
of the world - often under vastly varying conditions - is now the
central challenge facing the international community and the
developing countries.
30. Within the international community, many United Nations
organs have now started to support microcredits, especially, under
the leadership of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
The provision of actual financial resources is rather limited;
instead, United Nations bodies have emphasized capacity-building and
institutional strengthening, training and consultations to spread
best practices. Under the provisions of General Assembly resolution
52/194, all United Nations organs were requested to provide
information on their activities, this information is contained in
chapter III below.
31. It should be borne in mind that total world ODA is
diminishing, and resources for United Nations bodies are under
special strain. Therefore, a better use of the available resources
has become a more pressing imperative. It is important that
resources are channelled to sectors that have potential, especially
agriculture, infrastructure and education. It would be a pity if
experimentation with new forms of development activities were to
lead to a squandering of aid.
D. Towards stronger support to small enterprises
32. The discussion above suggests that if microcredit is to play
a strong role in development, certain requirements need to be
fulfilled. The most crucial requirement is to perceive microcredit
lending as part of a comprehensive programme of support to the small
enterprise sector. According to CGAP estimates, the sector already
employs 500 million of the poor; it constitutes an active base for
strengthening the private sector in a large number of developing
countries. This would entail Governments of developing countries
formulating plans and programmes to support small enterprises in
general, of which microcredit should be an integral part.
Furthermore, the regulatory framework should be receptive to small
enterprises. Many micro-borrowers have complained of this particular
shortcoming in developing countries.
33. There are many examples of successful interventions in the
OECD countries in favour of small enterprises, the foremost among
them being the United States Small Business Administration is a
rather remarkable organization that is fully backed by the
Government, operates through the private sector and provides the
small business sector with a wide array of support services,
including information and training. (Of course, commercial rates of
interest prevail in the programme).
34. Developing countries could benefit by instituting similar
comprehensive programmes, eventually involving the private sector
and, where applicable, efficient non-governmental organizations. The
United Nations could provide more robust technical assistance
programmes in that direction. There is a delicate balance to be
struck between getting the poor eventually into the market economy
and commercial lending rates on the one hand, and the importance of
providing low-cost assistance to them at the initial stage of their
entrepreneurship.
35. Targeting is a particularly thorny topic. There have been
allegations that in fact the very poor are so weak as not to benefit
from microlending, and that it is the "better off poor" that
benefit. While all the poor need to be included in the programmes,
the shortage of funds imples organizers to make special efforts to
reach the less well-off among the poor. Microcredit should be viewed
as complementary to the provision of basic services like education,
housing, health and nutrition. The latter are indispensable in the
fight against poverty.
36. A crucial part of any future effort should be to strengthen
the administrative structures of existing microcredit institutions
proliferate. It is possible that economies of scale are important in
microlending. Dynamic leadership and paid management staff are
probably crucial. The provision of information on available services
to the poor is particularly essential. This is not at present the
case, even in some advanced developing countries. Information on
services for the poor is rarely made readily available.
37. In that context, the long-term financial sustainability of
microcredit operations deserves particular attention. In the more
successful schemes, repayment rates are high, but this is not so
with many operations that do not have a high profile. In the absence
of long-term sustainability, microcredit operations become a welfare
or charity operation. While the latter have their own place in
development in some circumstances, they should not characterize
microcredit institutions.
38. Probably the single most important element in ensuring
long-term sustainability of these operstions is to include in them
the savings mobilization function. This is not always the case at
the present time. The operation that lends to the poor should also
cater to their savings needs. In many developing countries, savings
habits are quite widespread, but the institutional structures do not
usually cater to them. The possibility of combining savings and
lending operations in some form of credit union organization should
always be explored. Once again, the credit union movements in the
OECD countries could be emulated by developing countries.
International organizations could provide technical assistance in
the setting up of frameworks for credit unions and in strengthening
their management.
39. Donor countries have a special responsibility to ensure that
financial intermediation programmes are soundly based, operate
through solid local entities and involve the public sector and that
monitoring is an important part of the process. To some extent, the
recent prominence given to those operations is donor-driven; the
responsibility on the donors is subsequently heavy. It is
particularly important that donor funds, whether grants or loans,
not be perceived in recipient countries as simple transfers.
40. Coordination among the donor countries has in fact been
perceived to be weak in many settings, thus giving rise to
duplicative projects and fragmentation of available institutional
capability in the developing countries. The CGAP process should be
greatly strengthened and directed to better donor coordination. The
United Nations system can help in that process, especially at the
field level. The United Nations system also needs to spread a more
realistic notion of the potential of microcredit approaches, and to
put them in the broader perspective of the fight to eradicate
poverty.
III. International support to microcredit
lending
41. The present section contains a summary of activities of the
United Nations system.
A. United Nations
42. In the United Nations Secretariat, the responsability for
assisting in the implementation of the follow-up to the World Summit
for Social Development and the servicing of the intergovermental
bodies involved rests with the Department of Economic and Social
Affairs. The Departement is also the focal point for the First
United Nations Decade for the Eradication or Poverty. Given its
mandate, special attention is given to Africa and to the advancement
of women.
43. A one-day forum, entitled "Africa Advocacy Forum: Microcredit
and Poverty Eradication", was organized on 6 February 1997 by the
Office of the Special Coordinator for Africa and the Least Developed
Countries and co-sponsored by the former Department for Policy
Coordination and Sustainable Development and Department for
Development Support and Management Services and several United
Nations agencies. The agenda of the forum focused on five topics
related to important aspects of a strategy for poverty eradication.
These included the impact of microcredit on food security; women's
economic empowerment/self-employment; and traditional banking
systems.
44. In July 1997, the Office of the Special Coordinator for
Africa and the Least Developed Countries together with the
Governments of Japan and Thailand and UNDP, organized the
Asia-Africa Forum on the Economic Empowerment of Women, which was
held at Bangkok. The forum adopted a framework for action, which
includes a recommendation for the promotion of women's economic
empowerment through the promotion of microfinancing schemes,
including group financing without collateral, and savings and credit
facilities.
45. The Office for the Special Coordinator for Africa and the
Least Developed Countries also participated in the Sixth
International Women Entrepreneurs Conference, held at Accra from 16
to 19 September 1997. The theme of the conference was "Technology
and communication on women entrepreneurs in the global economy". The
Office will also be participating in the Second Tokyo International
Conference on African Development, which will deal with the issue of
rationalizing the microcredit concept in Africa and developing a
model that could be applied throughout the African region. With
regard to publications, the Office carried out a study on poverty
eradication in 14 selected coountries, describing experiences of
innovative efforts in addressing poverty and underdevelopment. The
study showed how microcredit schemes can improve community
development.
46. Another study on microfinance is being undertaken by the
Division of Public Economics and Public Administration. The study
will explore various facets of microfinance institutions, including
issues related to the financial dynamics of microenterprises and
what distinguishes microfinance from commercial finance.
Regional commissions
47. As a follow-up to the World Summit for Social Development,
and in response to General Assembly resolution 52/194 on the role of
microcredit in the eradication of poverty, the regional commissions
are undertaking a number of initiatives in the area of microfinance.
In the case of the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), the main
objective of its microfinance work programme is to promote
microfinancing as a strategic tool for sustaining the operations of
microenterprises, including the informal sector, by creating
awareness on its role to private development and advising member
States on how to articulate policies, strategies and mechanisms for
encouraging microcredit and required financial intermediation. In
this regard, 1997, ECA carried out a study on reconciling indigenous
informal and formal microfinancing systems and practices in Africa,
with recommendations to Governments, financial institutions,
non-governmental organizations, the private sector and grass-roots
organizations. The work programme for 1998-1999 also includes a
study on the role of microfinancing on the sustainable development
of small and medium-sized enterprises. Since 1992, the Commission
has been implementing a pilot project in Ethiopia and Zambia on the
promotion of the informal sector on the economic development of
Africa. It is expected that the project will next be implemented in
Cote d'Ivoire and Ghana. ECA plans in the coming years to
disseminate the results of the pilot project among other African
countries by publishing a manual on the tested participatory
approach, holding subregional workshops, and a reinforcing advisory
services to ECA membres states. In this regard, ECA also intends to
take measures to strengthen cooperation with bilateral and
multilateral partners.
48. Like other regional commissions, the Economic and Social
Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) provides a mechanism for
exchange of experience on microcredit facilities among interested
countries and a way of drawing up best practices and modalities of
assessement and of proposing new approches. In preparation for a
regional consultation on strengthening of rural financial
institutions, ESCAP undertook five country studies (Bhutan,
Indonesia, Nepal, Philippines and Viet Nam) during the second half
of 1997. The objective of the studies and consultations was to
examine critically the efficiency of non-formal credit organizations
in providing credit to the rural poor, for microfinance activities,
and to suggest policy alternatives for reaching the large numbers of
credit-needy rural poor households within the next decade.
49. A multi-year project on enhancing the access of women to
formal credit and financial institutions in the least developed
countries has been completed. The project involved a series of
country case studies and national workshops, a regional seminar and
two publications on improving the access of women to formal credit
and financial institutions. The intention of the project was to
evaluate the potential of the major constraints faced by women in
obtaining credit from formal financial institutions such as banks,
to identify special features of successful formal credit programmes
and to formulate recommendations. As a result of the project, there
is now much more awareness among central banks and major financial
institutions in the six least developed countries of the Asian
region to the problems faced by women.
50. The Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean
(ECLAC) carried out a project on small and medium-sized enterprise
financing in seven countries (Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia,
Costa Rica, Ecuador and Mexico). The project showed that current
approaches to small business finance were based on the experience of
previous policies that focused on credit subsidies and had meagre
results. New approaches to small-scale enterprises were part of
market-oriented policies. These approaches have frequently proposed
ambitious goals regarding access of smaller businesses to financing
technical training and technical and financial assistance. However,
actual implementation of those measures is still at an experimental
stage.
51. The Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA)
has a number of activities for promoting entrepreneurship in small
enterprises, including the provision of assistance to countries and
institutions of the region. One of its major activities is providing
support to start up business and building national training
capabilities. A number of "start your own business" courses for
potential entrepreneurs, and potential trainers, in cooperation with
local institutions, have been conducted since 1990. To that
effect,ESCWA produced a trainers manual in Arabic on starting your
own business. An understanding was reached early in 1996 between
ESCWA and the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM),in
which ESCWA provided technical assistance to a UNIFEM project
entitled "Strengthening institutions for the development of women
enterprises" in Jordan, Lebanon, the Syrian Arab Republic and the
Palestinian territories. ESCWA assistance to the UNIFEM project was
in the areas of entrepreneurship training and business counselling,
information and business incubators. ESCWA,in cooperation with
UNIFEM and the Development Employment Fund of Jordan, organized the
simulation exercises and learning laboratories development camp at
Amman from 6 to 11 December 1997. One of the major objectives of the
camp was to upgrade trainers' skills in adapting existing training
materials and designing new ones to meet the needs of various target
groups in urban and rural areas, with emphasis on the poor.
Particular consideration was given to the development of
microbusinesses. In the programme of work for 1998-1999, ESCWA is
expanding its activities on microcredit under the subprogramme on
improvement of the quality of life. Focus is given in that
subprogramme to the eradication of poverty, with microcredit as one
possible tool. The following areas will be covered: the role of
income-generating activities in eradicating poverty and improving
the standard of living in local communities; the role of the
informal sector in community development; the social impact of
structural adjustment, with special emphasis on unemployment; and
operational microcredit lending facilities to poor women in rural
and urban areas.
52. In assessing the role of microcredit in the economies in
transition, the Economic Commission for Europe (ECE) underlined the
fact that, although many countries, including the Czech Republic,
Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia, have recognized the need to
develop microenterprises, particularly in areas facing high
unemployment rates, entrepreneurs have limited access to sources of
finance. The reasons include the following: (a) financial
institutions consider it risky to lend to micro and small businesses
because of the high failure rate, economic uncertainties and lack of
collateral; (b) commercial and credit banks have no experience in
dealing with microenterprises, and the high administrative costs
involved in processing small loans; (c) lack of transparency in
evaluating loans and lack of skills of financial institutions in
dealing with microenterprises; (d) in almost all countries of the
region, the national clearing systems are poor and outdated and,
consequently, the majority of the transactions are made in cash
because of uncertainties and delays encountered by the electronic
money transfer systems; and (e) lack of reliable data regarding
markets. To help overcome these problems, ECE is supporting the
following: (a) favourable national policies on microenterprises and
microcredit organizations; (b) evaluation of current experiences
through surveys and workshops; (c) elaboration of medium-term and
long-term capacity-building programmes to create cost-effective and
self-sustaining microcredit organizations; and (d) creation of
long-term national and international grants and funds to implement
national programmes.
B.United Nations funds and programmes
1. United Nations Capital Development Fund
53. Since its creation in 1966, as a capital funding window under
the UNDP umbrella, the United Nations Capital Development Fund
(UNCDF) has been the channel for UNDP to fund microfinance
interventions. It has so far approved more than US$ 100 million of
investment credit activities, the majority being microfinance
related, with the balance to small and medium-sized enterprises. At
the present time, UNCDF has an active microfinance portfolio of
about $40 million, of which 70 per cent is in Africa, 20 per cent in
Asia and 10 per cent in Latin America. UNCDF has implemented
microfinance projects through a variety of partners, ranging from
state-owned financial institutions to credit unions and
non-governmental organizations. It has also used several financial
mechanisms in support of those projects, including grants to fund
start-up costs and operational expenses, provision of capital for
lending, and guarantee facilities that have been used as incentives
for banks to refinance "retailing" microfinance institutions. In
1996, UNCDF published a policy paper entitled "Microfinance and
poverty strategies" that underlines both the policy and instruments
used by UNCDF in helping restore basic financial intermediation
through the provision of credit and savings services,especially in
rural areas. In preparation of the Fund's 1999 evaluation by its
donors, UNCDF has commissioned a mid-term assessment of its
programmes, including local development funds,economic development
projects and the microfinance portfolio. Started in November 1997,
the portfolio's assessment has been carried out in close cooperation
with CGAP.It focuses on seven microfinance projects selected from
UNCDF major interventions, of which four are in Africa (Lesotho,
Madagascar, Malawi and a regional project in West Africa), two are
in Asia (Bhutan and Laos) and one in Latin America (Bolivia).
54. UNCDF has been actively supported by the Special Unit for
Microfinance, which was created in September 1997 and given the task
of building synergy between the established UNCDF experience in
microfinance and the growing demands from the global network of UNDP
country offices. The Unit also provides quality technical support to
the MicroStart programme, which was launched in February 1997 at the
Microcredit Summit held in Washington,D.C., and given the task of
helping start-up and fledging initiatives. The Unit has initiated or
supported project formulation exercises in Haiti, Madagascar, Mali,
Mauritania and Mozambique, and the Palestianian territories. It also
helped re-engineer the regional microfinance project with the West
African Development Bank to improve its impact and sustainability.
The Unit also provided key support to the preparation of the
portfolio evaluation with CGAP. Finally, it has helped UNCDF with
the identification of expertise, the elaboration of standard terms
of reference for audit and evaluation and the definition of standard
monitoring and impact evaluation tools that will also be used by the
MicroStart unit, thereby helping to improve and streamline
microfinance practices within UNDP.
2.United Nations Children's Fund
55. The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) integrates
microcredit into its programmes in countries where lack of access to
small loans is identified as an obstacle to the improvement of the
situation of women and children. In those countries, UNICEF works
with communities, non-governmental organizations and Governments to
(a)stimulate national efforts to expand microcredit for women; (b)
strengthen national and local capacities to deliver small loans and
basic social services; and (c) monitor and evaluate its support to
microcredit to improve its effectiveness and efficiency and
contribute to the dissemination of best practices with a view to
ensuring sustainable reduction in poverty. In this connection,
UNICEF has supported microcredit programmes in such countries as
Bangladesh, Benin, Brazil, Cambodia, China, Egypt, Ghana, Guatemala,
India, Kenya, Nepal, the United Republic of Tanzania and Viet Nam.
Recent evaluations and impact assessments conducted in two
countries, Egypt and Viet Nam have shown that microcredit can
improve the well-being of the borrowers and that the impact is
greatest when credit is combined with support for access to basic
social services.
3. United Nations Development Fund for Women
56. As part of its core strategy, UNIFEM recognizes the need to
provide credit to women as a way of strenghtening women's
institutions at the grass-roots level. In that connection, UNIFEM
has invested in a series of projects in Western Asia to ensure that
women's capacities and skills are developed and to enable them to
run small-scale businesses successfully. These initiatives include
developing business counselling services within national
institutions, establishing networks of credit programmes and
supporting businesss skills training sessions on business and
financial management for several hundred wonmen entrepreneurs in
Gaza, Jordan, Lebanon and the Syrian Arab Republic. Working in
partnership with several United Nations agencies and other
organizations, UNIFEM has facilitated the creation of women's
business networks in a region where women have limited economic
power. In the Latin American and Caribbean region, UNIFEM, in
association with Accion Internacional, worked to gain private sector
support for the launch of gender-sensitive initiatives and helped
broker a partnership between Latin American microlending
organizations and banks to leverage a $1,2 million line of credit to
support women's microenterprise in Colombia and Chile. In Africa, in
association with UNDP and the Special Unit for Technical Cooperation
among Developing Countries, UNIFEM brokered the establishment of
MICROFIN-Africa, a network of 42 enterprise non-governmental
organizations that deliver small credit to women in 17 countries of
sub-Saharan Africa. On the global level, UNIFEM has also facilitated
the formation of the International Coalition on Credit, which
consists of 32 of the world's leading microcredit and business
non-governmental organizations with more than 200 affiliated
organizations.
C. Specialized agencies of the United Nations
1. International Labour Organization
57. The involvement of the International Labour Organization
(ILO) in microfinance reaches back many years, through its
activities related to the development of the informal sector, and in
particular its promotion of cooperatives, including savings and
credit cooperatives. In response to the needs of its constituency -
Governments, trade unions and employer organizations - ILO developed
international labour norms that define standards for its
constituents on how to support entrepreneurial activities of the
working poor, formulated norms in technical cooperation to help
constituents finetune policies and improve institutional
performance, and developed research modalities to help resolve
information deficits,influence policy makers and identify best
practice. Through its country objective reviews, ILO found that its
constituents consider microfinance to be a potentially powerful tool
in facing the poverty alleviation challenge, especially through
self-employment and micro and small enterprise development. The
reviews call on authorities to create a more favourable environment
for formal and informal microfinance, the establishment of
additional microfinance institutions,and improved access for micro
and small enterprises to microfinance services, and to assist women
in accessing those opportunities (for example, by using collateral
substitutes for loan securitization).
58. ILO conducts research on various aspects of microfinance to
fill information deficits, influence policy makers and identify
best/good/bad practices. Its ongoing work covers such issues as
enterprise creation by the unemployed; the role of microfinance in
industrialized countries - an ILO action programme for 1998-1999;
the impact of financial sector liberalization on the access of micro
and small enterprises to financial services; gender and control over
financial resources; the use of collateral substitutes in loan
securitization; and strategies to reduce transaction costs in bank
lending to micro and small enterprises.
59. With regard to technical cooperation, a recent review of ILO
technical cooperation, covering the period 1996-1998, identified 52
projects with a microfinance component. Nineteen of the projects
focus exclusively on microfinance, while the rest contain other
intervention components. The total budget of the 52 projects is
$67.8 million, with $6.1 million going into microcredit funds and an
estimated $30.1 million to research and advisory and
capacity-building services in the field of microfinance. The
projects are located in Africa, Asia and Latin America. ILO
expertise is also increasingly in demand in the promotion of
sustainable microfinance operations in post-conflict countries such
as Cambodia and the former Yugoslavia and in regions such as Central
America and sub-Saharan Africa.
2. World Bank
60. One reason the original members of CGAP decided to locate the
secretariat within the World Bank was to strenghten the Bank's
growing microfinance-lending portfolio. CGAP expects the Bank to
play a pivotal role in working with Governments to create an
enabling business environment for microfinance institutions and
making linkages between overall macroeconomic framework and
microfinance.CGAP has formed alliances with World Bank Group
entities involved in microfinance, including the Sustainable Banking
for the Poor Initiative, the Africa Research Programme and the
Rural, Microfinance and Small and Medium-sized Enterprise Thematic
Group. Each alliance has generated joint products such as the
Microfinance Practical Guide and case studies of microfinance
institutions. In terms of World Bank projects with microfinance
components, it is reported that, in 1997, there were 21 such
projects being developed or in the pipeline in 19 countries,
including 13 low-income African countries. In almost every case,
CGAP was involved at an early stage, reviewing the choice of
financial intermediaries, products and services, capacity-building
activities and other characteristics of the planned loan or credit.
CGAP has also collaborated on World Bank projects in several
countries to leverage the Bank's ability to create policy
environments. In the past two years, the CGAP secretariat and the
World Bank staff have held technical discussions on more than 40
existing and planned microfinance-lending operations and regional
activities. This cooperation has improved the design of many lending
operations, resolved operational and technical issues and expedited
financial sector reform in a number of countries,including Angola,
Argentina, Armenia, Brazil, the Republic of Moldova, Sri Lanka and
Viet Nam.
3. International Fund for Agricultural Development
61. Over the past two decades of providing financial aid, much of
it through microcredit programmes for the poorest of the rural poor
in developing countries, the International Fund for Agricultural
Development (IFAD) firmly believes that the poor are "bankable". Its
action plan is based on three fundamental propositions. The first
stems from the Fund's mandate to address rural poverty by
recognizing the importance of microfinance as a key of empowerment
tool in ensuring improvements in incomes and sustainable household
food security among the world's poorest families, especially the
women of those families. The second recognizes the fact that, while
access to credit and savings facilities is crucial, it is usually
not enough by itself to ensure the sustainable development of the
rural poor, who also need links to an efficient distribution system
for their productions, including viable roads to market places,
access to appropriate technology, technical training, fair prices
for inputs and a favourable regulatory climatic. Thirdly, rather
than providing temporary services for the poor, the main objective
of IFAD is to develop viable and financially sustainable rural
financial systems, especially for the very poor living in remote
areas in many developing countries. While maintaining the prime
focus on the poor, IFAD also emphasizes the need to safeguard loan
funds, promote sector-wide performance standards and strengthen the
provision of non-financial services. At the regional and local
levels, IFAD is helping to build a cadre of microfinance technical
experts, strengthen training centres and promote sustained linkages
to commercial capital, while seeking to ensure a favourable
regulatory environment. IFAD is an active member of CGAP and has
thus far committed over $1 billion in financial services and credit
to the rural poor, which represents about one quarter of its total
lending to date. An estimated 20 million persons have benefited from
these services.
Notes
1 See Report of the World Summit for Social Development,
Copenhagen 6-12 March 1995 (United Nations publication,Salcs NO.
E.96.IV.8).
Selected recent literature on microfinance and related
issues
United Nations entities
International Fund for Agricultural Development, The State of
World Rural Poverty: An inquiry into Its Causes and Consequences
(New York, New York University Press, 1992).
United Nations Capital Development Fund, Microfinance and
Anti-Poverty Strategies, A Donor Perspective (1997).
Consultative Group to Assist the Poorest and World Bank
CGAP, "The Microcredit Summit Report", communique issued by the
Council of Heads of State and Government at the Microcredit
Summit,1997.
__________,"A policy framework for the Consultative Group to
Assist the Poorest (CGAP)- a microfinance programme".
__________,Focus notes Nos. 1,2 and 10.
__________,"Microfinance : the new emerging market?", by Mohini
Malhotra, Newsletter No. 3.
__________,"Towards creating a poverty-free world", by Mohammad
Yunus, Newsletter No. 1.
__________,"Three innovative institutions in Bangladesh: BRAC,
ASA and Buro-Tangail", by Gregory Chen, Newsletter No. 5.
__________,"Strengthening Asian MFIs",by Jyita Mukherjee,
Newsletter No. 5.
World Bank, "Case studies in microfinance, Zimbabwe: ZAMBUCO
Trust" (1995) (abstract executive summary).
__________,"The informal sector and microfinance institutions in
West Africa", Regional and Sectoral Studies, Leila Webster and Peter
Fidler, eds. (1996).
Others
Buckley, Graeme, "Microfinance in Africa: is it either the
problem or the solution?", World Development, vol. 25, No 7 (1997).
Currie,Antony, "Small lenders count too", Euromoney (July 1996).
Development Centre of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation
and Development, Microfinance for the Poor, Hartmut Schneider,ed.
(1997).
Johnson, Susan and Ben Rogaly, "Microfinance and poverty
reduction", Oxfam(United Kingdom and Ireland) and ACTIONAID (1997).
MkNelly, Barbara, and Christopher Dunford, "Are credit savings
services effective?", A Literature and Analysis, Freedom from
Hunger, Research Paper No. 1.
Mosley, Paul, and David Hulme, "Microenterprise finance: is there
a conflict between growth and poverty alleviation?", World
Development, vol.26, No. 5 (1998), pp.783-790.
United States Agency for International Development, "Assessing
the impacts of microenterprise interventions: a framework for
analysis, managing for results, Working Paper No. 7 (March 1995)
__________,Microentreprise Development Brief No. 18 (September
1995).
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