Interview on Microfinance Commercialization with Mariama Ashcroft
Published by Kirsten Weiss, | 27 Jan 2009 at 06:54 pm
I just returned from Nigeria’s 3rd Annual Microfinance Conference, where Mrs. Mariama Ashcroft of Women’s World Banking presented a paper on commercialization. When I told her about Mykro.org, she was kind enough to give me an interview for the site. My questions and her responses below:
Kirsten Weiss: How do you define microfinance commercialization?
Mariama Ashcroft: It’s a strategy to create a means of reaching large scale numbers of low income borrowers, with a focus on sustainability. This means an approach that relies on strong systems, governance, professional staff, and high performance standards, and which is moving toward profitable and efficient operations and towards getting fully integrated into the financial system. The latter in turn translates into financial intermediation – being able to mobilize deposits and access commercial funds. Financial integration/intermediation is what draws the line between NGOs and commercial MFIs.
Kirsten: Why should MFIs commercialize?
Mariama: The primary reason is the need to expand access. Though the estimates vary, the numbers indicate that demand for financial services far outstrips supply. One statistic suggests that there are two billion productive people without access to finance. Other numbers refer to 500 million microentrepreneurs without access to credit.
Because NGOs can neither fully intermediate nor provide a broad range of financial services, it makes sense for NGOs to transform to commercial institutions. The assumption is that when the institution can mobilize financial resources, it can expand more broadly and deeply, placing it in a better position to provide more products that low income people need.
The other part of the rationale is in terms of governance. When MFIs commercialize, they’re held to higher performance and reporting standards. For instance, they’re typically regulated with stricter oversight. As one example, there are frequently minimum conditions at the board and senior management level such as the fit and proper test, which requires regulators to approve all board and senior management positions.
Kirsten: What are the challenges to transformation?
Mariama: The first challenge is the regulation – particularly the minimum capital requirements. In many cases, NGOs have been able to accumulate retained earnings over time sufficient to meet the minimum capital requirements stipulated by law to become a microfinance bank. But in many countries these MFIs aren’t allowed to be sole owners, so they must find other investors for equity participation.
Another important hurdle for transforming NGOs lies in product design and development. Here I’m talking mainly about savings – most NGOs only take savings as a guarantee for loans. As a microfinance bank (MFB), however, they must develop savings products that appeal to clients based on trust. When providing credit, the MFI must trust the customers. With savings the reverse is true and crossing that line has been a challenge for many MFIs.
The third hurdle is in terms of systems. Under regulation, MFBs are held to higher reporting and compliance standards. Many NGOs tend not to have these systems fully developed and in many cases must start from scratch to create them as they transform. This can be both costly and stressful.
A fourth hurdle I’d like to mention in terms of meeting the rationale for commercialization is to be able to reach scale in terms of outlets. An NGO can set up branches wherever it wants because it doesn’t need a sophisticated infrastructure to provide credit. An NGO can set up a meeting under a tree if it likes. But once you become regulated that changes, because the law says branches must look a certain way – they must have secure premises, a strong room, 24 hour security, etc. In many cases, MFI branches can’t meet these specifications. I know of one case of an NGO which transformed to a MFB and its operations shrank as much as 50%. It took them over five years to return to their original size. In another case, an NGO started with 21 branches but after transformation was only able to upgrade ten branches to reach the minimum requirements. The remaining branches remained unlicensed and offered credit only.
In Nigeria, Central Bank policy allows MFBs to work around this hurdle by having “meeting points.” Meeting points can be a small room somewhere with a table and a few desks – enough room for field agents to work and to meet with clients. These are supplements to full-service MFB branches; for example, one branch might service seven meeting points. Another good thing about Nigerian regulation is that MFB field agents can make collections in the field, then at the end of the day return to their meeting points, prepare reports, check cash, and take the cash to the branch. This system reduces pressure on MFBs to have many branches, while increasing access to customers.
A final challenge is the risk of serving less poor clients because of the pressure for profitability. Commercial investors want commercial returns. This has led to a tendency to disburse larger sized loans to higher income clients. The concept of mission drift comes into play here.
Kirsten: What trends do you see in microfinance commercialization?
Mariama: I see more commercial banks doing microfinance but there’s still a long way to go here. There are also more private investors interested in microfinance, increasing the flow of funds into the sector. Microfinance is attracting new players that aren’t even financial institutions, for example cell phone companies and other technology providers, grocery stores and gas stations serving the role of point of sales outlets. Rating agencies are playing an increasingly important role in terms of increased demand for transparency. Even mainstream companies are becoming interested in rating MFIs.
As a side note, I represented ShoreBank International at the same conference, and presented on Commercial Product Development. You can view a copy of my presentation on my blog: http://mfimarketing.blogspot.com/2009/01/presentation-commercial-product-design.html.
Author's Website: http://mfimarketing.blogspot.com/
