Promo%ng(TransparentPricing(in(the(Microfinance(Industry ...€¦ · SESSION2 ThePriceand&...

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SESSION  2  The  Price  and  Cost  Curves  

     

Paris  July  2012  

Promo%ng  Transparent  Pricing  in  the  Microfinance  Industry  

Agenda  1.  Review  recent  challenges  in  microfinance  2.  Introduc=on  to  the  confusing  world  of  micro-­‐credit  

pricing  3.  Averages  are  decep=ve  in  microfinance!  4.  To  understand  microfinance,  you  need  to  

understand  “the  curve”  5.  Transparent  pricing  is  necessary  to  make  the  

flawed  market  of  micro-­‐credit  func=on  beMer  

   

Two  common  ques=ons  without  simple  answers:  

 1)  What  is  the  “market  price”  of  

microcredit?    

2)  What  is  a  “responsible  price”  for  microcredit?  

Average  Price  

Responsible  Pricing  Range    

Too  Low!  

Too  High!  

Is  there  a  curve  in  other  countries?  

The  interes=ng  ques=on:  Are  ins=tu=ons  “off-­‐of-­‐the-­‐curve”  pricing  responsibly?  

Why  is  there  a  price  curve  for  micro-­‐loans?  

Are  there  cost  curves  in  real  data?  

Cost  Components  that  Affect  Pricing  

Component  

Financial  Costs   10%  Loan  Loss   2%  Opera=ng  Costs   20%  Profit   3%  

Total  Price   35%  

In  the  Philippines,  we  find  a  curve  not  only  for  prices,  but  also  for  Opera=ng  Costs.  

Common  industry  benchmark  of  15-­‐20%  OpCost  Ra=o  is  appropriate  for  larger  loans  

But  smaller  loans  generate  an  Op  Cost  Ra=o  well  in  excess  of  20%  

No=ce  that  in  all  three  countries  there  is  a  remarkably  consistent  spread  between  OCR  

and  Yield  

Understanding  the  cost  curve  for  micro-­‐loans  

Efficiency:  Opera=ng  Cost  Ra=o  The  formula  for  the  ra=o:  

Annual  Opera=onal  Cost    -­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐  Average  Loan  Por[oliio  

We  will  analyze  at  the  level  of  a  single  loan  •  Cost  to  process  and  disburse  a  loan  (once  per  loan)  •  Monitoring  cost  (monthly  cost)  •  We  annualize  these  cost  

Pricing  for  Different  Products  

Component   $100  Loan   $1000  Loan  

Financial  Costs   10%   10%  Loan  Loss   2%   2%  Opera=ng  Costs   50%   15%  Profit   3%   3%  

Total  Price   65%   30%  

Responsible  Behavior  is  an  Obliga=on  

•  Microfinance  take  place  in  quite  imperfect  markets  •  Our  clients  are  the  very  poor  •  We  hold  power,  with  power  comes  responsibility  •  Micro-­‐credit  is  not  an  exchange  nego=ated  between  equal  par=es  

3.  The  tempta=on  of  large  profits  can  lead  some  to  irresponsible  prac=ce  

4.  Irresponsible  prac=ce  leads  to  client  abuse  5.  This  repeats  the  paMern  of  the  past  2,000  years.    

Microfinance  was  created  to  be  an  alterna=ve  path.  

The  Income  Distribu=on  Pyramid  

Individual  Lending  

Solidarity  Groups  

Village  Banking  

Self-­‐Help  Groups  

Microfinance  is  a  rare  industry  with  nearly  100%  of  clients  at  boMom  of  the  pyramid.  

How  much  weath  should  be  transferred  from  the  poor  to  the  rich?  

How  shall  we  discuss  fairness  and  ethics?  

   

   

   

MFI’s  Costs  

Defining  a  Responsible  Price  

   

+  MFI’s  Choice  of  Profit  

MFI’s  Costs  

Defining  a  Responsible  Price  

   

=  Price  Set  by  the  MFI  

+  MFI’s  Choice  of  Profit  

MFI’s  Costs  

Defining  a  Responsible  Price  

What  Price  Can  the  Poor  Afford?  

=  Price  Set  by  the  MFI  

+  MFI’s  Choice  of  Profit  

MFI’s  Costs  

Defining  a  Responsible  Price  

What  Price  Can  the  Poor  Afford?  

=  Price  Set  by  the  MFI  

+  MFI’s  Choice  of  Profit  

MFI’s  Costs  

Defining  a  Responsible  Price  

Step  3:  Factors  influencing  client  ability  to  pay  

Step  2:  Analysis  or  current  product-­‐level  prices  

Step  1:  Cost  Curve  and  Choice  of  Profit  Level  

Pricing  for  Sustainability  must  address  the  reality  of  the  COST  curve  

Mexico,  Brazil,  and  Colombia  not  present  at  

100%  

Only  Mexico,  Brazil,  Colombia  and  Philippines  

at  5%  

GNI/Cap Mexico Brazil Colombia Philippines Azerbaijan5% 50% 60% 55% 60%10% 33% 35% 28% 32% 21%25% 20% 24% 18% 22% 17%50% 19% 12% 16% 14%100% 12% 12%150% 10%200%

Operating  Cost  Ratio,  average  per  county  data

GNI/Cap Ecuador Nepal Bosnia Bolivia Bulgaria Average5% 58%10% 25% 28%25% 15% 13% 15% 25% 16% 18%50% 10% 8% 11% 17% 12% 13%100% 7% 5% 7% 14% 8% 9%150% 13% 7% 10%200% 12% 6% 9%

Operating  Cost  Ratio,  average  per  county  data

Price  curve  follows  cost  curve  

Price  curve  follows  cost  curve  

A  new  way  to  look  at  the  data  

1.  Is  an  MFI  close  to  the  curve  in  its  country  for  costs?    For  por[olio  yield?  

2.  If  not,  why  not?  3.  What  spread  has  the  MFI  selected  between  its  

costs  and  the  price  it  has  chosen?  

Pricing  for  Sustainability    

Pricing  for  Profits  

•  Must  the  ins=tu=on  be  sustainable?  

The  Ins=tu=on  

A  Deeper  Discussion  of  “Sustainability”  

•  Must  the  ins=tu=on  be  sustainable?  

The  Ins=tu=on  

•  Must  each  product  be  sustainable?  •  Fair  for  the  rich  to  subsidize  the  poor?  •  Fair  for  the  poor  to  subsidize  the  rich?  

Each  loan  product  

A  Deeper  Discussion  of  “Sustainability”  

•  Must  the  ins=tu=on  be  sustainable?  

The  Ins=tu=on  

•  Must  each  product  be  sustainable?  •  Fair  for  the  rich  to  subsidize  the  poor?  •  Fair  for  the  poor  to  subsidize  the  rich?  

Each  loan  product  

•  Must  each  individual  loan  be  sustainable?  •  Fair  for  some  clients  to  subsidize  others?  

Each  client  within  a  loan  product  

A  Deeper  Discussion  of  “Sustainability”  

The  Profit/(Loss)  Component  is  the  Choice  of  Management  

Pricing  for  Profits  

Pricing  for  Profits  

Pricing  for  Profits  

Proposal    

Let’s  embrace  a  respec[ul  and  serious  dialogue  on  these  issues  of  

prices  and  profits  

What  do  YOU  think?  

 If  your  MFI  is  new,  and  your  costs  are  therefore  high,  is  it  fair  to  set  a  high  price  and  hide  it  from  your  clients?    

What  do  YOU  think?  

 If  the  market  is  compe==ve  for  $2000  loans,  is  it  fair  to  make  high  profits  from  $200  loans  to  subsidize  the  $2000  loans?  

What  do  YOU  think?  

What  is  the  maximum  ROA  that  is  fair  for  $5000  loans?          A)  2%        B)  5%      C)  10%      D)  20%      E)  no  limit  

What  do  YOU  think?  

What  is  the  maximum  ROA  that  is  fair  for  $200  loans?          A)  2%        B)  5%      C)  10%      D)  20%      E)  no  limit  

Promo=ng  Transparent  Pricing    in  the  Microfinance  Industry  

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