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7/30/2019 Microfinance research
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REFORMS REQUIRED IN MFIs
Students Name: - Abhishek Anand
Present Address: - A-133, Patel Nagar Phase-2, Ghaziabad
UTTAR PRADESH-201001
E-mail Address: - [email protected]
Mobile No: - 9958239924
Course Name: - BACHELOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION 5TH SEM
College Name: - INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY & SCIENCE
MOHAN NAGAR, GHAZIABAD
Cigma/abs/158
mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]7/30/2019 Microfinance research
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ABSTRACT
Microfinance Institutions are the financial services provided for the poor masses so as to
eradicate the poverty and to attain inclusive growth. With lots of people from rural and urban
sections still far from microfinance institutions, serious measures need to be taken. It has
been observed that, MFIs are able to reach the poor effectively mainly because they have
designed products and channels. However, mainstream finance institutions are not suitable
for the need of the poor thus, MFIs has the opportunity to grow and remove poverty from
economy.
This paper will cover the major problem faced by the NABARD due to which the poverty has
not declined considerably. There has been two models on which the MFIs work those are
JLP (Joint Liability Group) and SHG (Self Help Group) of these MFIs, such as SKS
Microfinance, Ujjivan, SEWA etc. are widely distributed to and have branches in five to six
states but in order to meet all the 350 million poor people approximately present in India with
a vision of eradicating poverty by 2020 more revolutions are needed in these sectors. Thus
the paper mainly focuses on the eradication of poverty from the economy, to attain inclusivegrowth and to provide services in all those areas which are still left by MFIs through new
and innovative measures.
FOUR KEY WORDS
I MICRO CREDIT
II ERADICATION OF POVERTY
III SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP
IV POTENTIAL MARKET
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INTRODUCTION
Microfinance Institution has been practiced over a long period we can say since centuries.
But they were called out by different names as they also follow the concept of savings and
group credit. These includes chit funds in India, tandas in Mexico, arisan in Indonesia,
cheetu in Sri Lanka, tontines in west Africa & many more.
In the past two decades the MFIs has risen considerably giving the major economic in the
world to put a wide eye on it. With the increase in the numbers MFIs have shown that even
by extending Rs.500 can help the poor in many ways. It helps in increasing the assets, child
education, better health facilities etc. Although MFIs has been more or less successful in
reaching wider areas of the rural in urban areas poor are still lagging behind. With the urban
market contributing 62% of the GDP upliftment is necessary for the poor people of urban
area constituting 280 million people. And this market is expected to over 600 million by
2030. If microfinance has to continue expanding outreach and impact on the nations poor,
the ability for instructions to overcome current constraints to offering financial services to the
urban poor must be examined and addressed. India being a large democratic with 5, 93,643
villages constituting 70% of its population. Their primary occupation is agriculture. MFIs
are providing loans to farmers too, where the banks has not reached to strengthen the
economy and eradicating poverty. However, in India small and low marginal farmer faces
problem everyday because of the poor quality of seeds, less profit due to intermediaries
which leads them to commit suicide. Then there was a concern raised by the government
because of the methods involved by the MFIs during the recovery of loans. The
microfinance is becoming more of a business rather than their mainstream work of providing
loans and to work for the upliftment of poor.
Credit was viewed as essential part of fight against poverty which led to following measures:-
i. Expansion of the institutional structure.ii. Directed lending to disadvantaged borrowers and sectors.
iii. Interest rates supported by subsidies.iv. Institutional vehicles: - cooperatives, commercial banks and regional rural banks. i
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Many reforms happened as a developmental process for microfinance. Some of them
were:-
i. Increasing the number of branches so that more poorers come under the umbrella.ii. Stimulate additional flows to the sector.
iii. Relaxation was granted to the rural banks on whom they should lend.iv. Then there was a process of restructuring and recapitalizing of microfinance which
becomes to be a hit in rural areas1ii
i Annie Duflo (center for microfinance research) 28thoct05 Pg no:-18ii Annie Duflo (center for microfinance research) 28th oct,05
With the increase in the number of branches from 1833 in 1969, to around 32,538 at present.
49% of all scheduled commercial bank branches are rural. The proportion of borrowings of
rural households has also considerably rising from 7% in the year 1961 to 60 per cent. Now
more than 31 per cent of the total deposit accounts are in rural India. But with all these
measures success was not as high as it was hoped. There were many reasons:-
I. High default rates.II. Improper implementation of programmes.
III. Lack in policy design.IV. Commercial banks were not accepting that lending to the poor could be a viable
activity.
Many measures have been taken but despite all these efforts large gaps remain unchanged.
i. Against 741 million people 500 million people unserved.ii. Population per branch is also very high touching 23k approx.
iii. Usage of savings account is as low as 18%iv. The number of villages per branch is as high as 19.
There has been a huge gap in demand and supply as well.
Demand:- Rs 450 billion per year
Disbursed:- Rs 39 billion per year
500 million unserved poor.
1
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MFI need to protect its customers against all risks involved. Although its branches are scaling
up in South India with more than 60% of the branches there, other parts of the country remain
unaffected. Another problem is a lack of debt and equity funds for MFIs to pass it on to the
poor. Capital availability for microfinance is a big challenge and it is emerging as a bigger
problem for both microfinance is a big challenge and it is emerging as a bigger problem for
both microfinance sector and for loan taker. Media in Andhra Pradesh has reported that high
interest rates and coercive loan collection by microfinance groups has led to some 30
suicides. Government has also kept a wide eye on it and gave a nod to all the MFIs that any
unfair means of recovery shall be totally avoided. The high risk of micro entrepreneurship
and small business entrepreneurship through the microfinance play a very crucial role in the
economic development of their families and communities but certain obstacles such as
poverty, unemployment, low household income, societal discriminations mostly in
developing countries have hindered their performance of that role. As such most of them
embark on entrepreneurial activities to support their families. It is discovered that
entrepreneurship could be an effective strategy for poverty reduction in a country since
entrepreneurs are the worst hit in such situation. It is however noted that discovered that
women entrepreneurship have low business performed compared to their male counterparts
and this is cause by factors which normally affect entrepreneurship performance. Such factors
include lack of credit, savings, education or training and social capital. Dual mission of
MFIs to be financially available as well as developed. There are very large numbers of
institutions, both in the formal and non-formal sectors. The banks which provide
microfinance along with their other usual banking services are also microfinance institutions.
They are providing a variety of financial services using different delivery mechanisms.
Besides, there are others who provide such services along with regular banking services to all
types of customers. There is an adverse selection in terms of passing the loans to their clients.They are not aware of their client types i.e.; they need to have proper information about the
repayment capacity of each and every client to reduce the default rates. One of the fastest
growing sectors in India, microfinance market is dominated by SHG linkage. with many case
studies suggests that progressive institutions have increasingly recognized microfinances
business potential not only within the context of social responsibility and have taken steps to
establish urban operations, yet the focus on social responsibility have taken steps to establish
urban operations. Eventually, scalability and support from the public sector through a
favorable legal and regulatory framework will become an issue if resources are going to be
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made available for urban MFI to expand achieve significant outreach and volume to make
their contributions to the development of the urban poor meaningful.
OBJECTIVES
Since Independence government in India is experimenting with a large number of grants and
subsidies based on poverty alleviation programs. Statistics show that these programs have not
been fully successful in meeting their economic objectives. A large number of small and
marginal farmer, agriculture labour and women are excluded from wide range of financial
services. Therefore the growth of all those development depends upon the microfinance
global reach.
45.4 million Farmer households in the country of a total of 89.3 million household are
deprived of credit either from institutional or non institutional sources. Objectives should be
to facilitate all the micro services like the reduce the cost of loan taken. Major objectives of
the MFIs are to accept deposits so as to promote savings. MFI must be able to capture the
saving where money is earned because poor people are unable to frequently travel to deposit
money at distinct branches. Because new infrastructure is costly, MFIs looking for leverage
existing retail outlets. For this to be a great solution , secure technology platform is necessary,
through transactions can be authorized and all the information can be accessed and provided
by institutions through which transaction can be authorized and recorded in record span of
time rather than approaching retail outlets individually. Postal services are not always
reliable. Therefore payment facility should be made available to mobile operators as business
correspondence. The argue that mobile networks operators are following common patterns
for microfinance institutions working to expand financial access through the use of mobile
phones. Microfinance could not lead to business performance without opportunity forentrepreneurial activity. Financial management theories believe that fund could only be
sourced to finance a predetermined project, business or contract [Van horne, 1980].As such,
micro finance could only lead to business performance. When there is the tendency to engage
the new business or business expansion [antoncic 2006, Shan 2003].Limited studies are also
available on attitude towards risk-taking moderating performance. Institutions provide
assistance and stated that entrepreneur ability to discover and exploit opportunity for
entrepreneurial activity differ between individuals and depends on individuals attitude
towards risk-taking. Developing these tools institutions take initiatives so that an individual
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can develop the entrepreneurial skills and identify the opportunity and can better invest
through the help of risk-taking skills. As such, a risk averse individuals and depends
individuals attitude towards risk-taking. A person may not search for or discover
entrepreneurial opportunity he/she has negative attitude towards risk-taking. In the same vein,
an individual may have an innovative business or services idea and great livelihood
To access micro-finance but may not utilize the opportunity if he/she fears risk. The
institutions liability removes this misleading behavior. Micro-finance provides the needed
opportunity for entrepreneur to start or improve business in order to make profit and improve
their lives. Opportunity for entrepreneurial activity in terms of new business expansion, acts
as a link between micro finance factors and women entrepreneur performance. It is reported
that micro-finance factors create opportunity for entrepreneur performance to generate
income [bagma 2008].The discovery of business opportunity and decision to exploit the
opportunities leads to search of external funds.
Its objective also aims at identifying opportunity in the market, identified through
innovations, creates the need for micro-finance factors which in turns creates opportunity for
entrepreneurs profits. Social capital provides opportunity for women entrepreneur to network
so as to access information and resources for business [Tata and Prasad 2008].Traditionally,
when a person wants to start a business venture they go to a bank for a loan. But what should
a budding entrepreneur do if he is too poor to obtain financing to start a profitable business?
The answer always lies in a relatively new branch of financial services such as loans, savings
and insurance to poor people. A microfinance institution simply offers such services to the
poor, according to consulting group to assist to poor. It can be a credit union, commercial
bank financial nongovernmental organizations, or credit union cooperative. Following is a list
of the main purpose of microfinance.
There are many challenges and objectives for microfinance.
i. It needs to work on what kind of programs to be run?ii. Which programs can show the impact?
iii. And up to what extent it can be increased.
There is also a necessity of filling up gaps in practice of microfinance. There is also a major
drawback in case of micro-credit and lack of financial capability. Thus, all the MFIs are
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necessarily needs to research the links between access to financial services and participation
of the poor in the larger economy.
The MFIs also needs to find answer to many questions such as:-
i. What drives savings and credit behavior?ii. What is the reason for default?
iii. Why dont poor people/households go for profitable activity?iv. How do households face shocks and risks?v. Do household saves if so then how?
MFI does also need to see what the impacts on policies are. Whether it affects repayment
behavior of clients or not. Staff incentives, combination of different products and compulsory
savings or insurance plays a pivotal role in affecting loans and repayment behavior. Many
MFI members simultaneously borrow and save. The lack of saving services results in the
decline of savings, riskier and often lowers yielding ways such as through purchase of
ornaments. For the MFIs this lack of access to deposits implies that they tend to be highly
leveraged.
Savings should be promoted more and more by the MFIs. Second, microfinance sector
institutions are no longer solely socially motivated. Due to the growing perception that it is
possible to earn high returns through microfinance lending, commercially driven entities are
also being attracted to the sector. This further needs for supervision and consumer protection.
Third, some MFIs have started offering products such as insurance, remittances and pensions
by tying up with mainstream providers. While this helps in broadening the scope of
microfinance services, it also calls for coordinated regulation of the sector particularly in
view of the limited financial literacy of its participants. Such increasing overlap between
various financial institutions is expected to continue. Finally, while the diversity of legalforms in the sector has arisen due to its unplanned, entrepreneurial growth, a uniform
regulatory framework would enable a level playing field and prevent regulatory arbitrage.
While regulation is essential, avoiding over regulation that hamper innovation and unduly
increases transaction costs is also equally important. For small efforts of starting informal
self-help groups (SHG) to access the much needed savings and credit services in the early
1980s the microfinance sector has grown significantly today. The fact that national bodies
like SIDBI and NABARD are giving their time energy to reckon this sector. The most
significant issue that triggers a transformation is growth. Both promoters and providers
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of microfinance encounter this though at different stages of growth. Invariably the
promoters
of microfinance find that the existing institutions are unwilling to provide finance at the same
pace at which the providers expect them to provide finance. Working with the attitudes of
these organizations is not an easy task. For instance, MYRADA in India was working hard on
linking SHGs to the local banks and often found that the mainstream organizations have their
limitations. In several cases the initiative was individual drivenand depended on the
manager. In such a situation impatience creeps in and the NGO would get into action to either
start lending on their own (they need not necessarily transform, but open a division for
microfinance), or set up a MFO. The story appears familiar with several Indian MFOs, if onelooks at their genesis carefully. Once microfinance institutions are engaged in deposit taking
in order to mobilize household savings, they become financial intermediaries. Consequently,
prudential financial regulations become necessary to ensure the solvency and financial
soundness of the institution and to protect the depositors. However, excessive regulations that
do not consider the nature of microfinance institution and their operation can hamper their
viability. In view of small loan size, microfinance institutions should be subjected to a
minimum capital requirement which is lower than that applicable to commercial banks. On
the other hand, a more stringent capital adequacy rate (the ratio between capital and risk
assets) should be maintained because microfinance institutions provide uncollateralized
loans.To be successful, financial intermediaries that provide services and generate domestic
resources must have the capacity to meet high performance standards. They must achieve
excellent repayments and provide access to clients. And they must build toward operating and
financial self-sufficiency and expanding client reach. In order to do so, microfinance
institutions need to find ways to cut down on their administrative costs and also to broaden
their resource base. Cost reductions can be achieved through simplified and decentralized
loan application, approval and collection processes, for instance, through group loans which
give borrowers responsibilities for much of the loan application process, allow the loan
officers to handle many more clients and hence reduce costs (Otero et al. 1994).
Microfinance institutions can broaden their resource base by mobilizing savings, accessing
capital markets, loan funds and effective institutional development support. A logical way to
tap capital market is securitization through a corporation that purchases loans made by
microenterprise institutions with the funds raised through the bonds issuance on the capital
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market. There is at least one pilot attempt to securitize microfinance portfolio along these
lines in Ecuador. As an alternative, BancoSol of Bolivia issued a certificate of deposit which
is traded in Bolivian stock exchange. In 1994, it also issued certificates of deposit in the U.S.
(Churchill 1996). The Foundation for Cooperation and Development of Paraguay issued
bonds to raise capital for microenterprise lending (Grameen Trust 1995). Most poor people
manage to mobilize resources to develop their enterprises and their dwellings slowly over
time. Financial services could enable the poor to leverage their initiative, accelerating the
process of building incomes, assets and economic security. However, conventional finance
institutions seldom lend down-market to serve the needs of low-income families and women-
headed households. They are very often denied access to credit for any purpose, making the
discussion of the level of interest rate and other terms of finance irrelevant. Therefore the
fundamental problem is not so much of unaffordable terms of loan as the lack of access to
credit itself (Kim 1995).The lack of access to credit for the poor is attributable to practical
difficulties arising from the discrepancy between the mode of operation followed by financial
institutions and the economic characteristics and financing needs of low-income households.
For example, commercial lending institutions require that borrowers have a stable source of
income out of which principal and interest can be paid back according to the agreed terms.
However, the income of many self employed households is not stable, regardless of its size.
A large number of small loans are needed to serve the poor, but lenders prefer dealing with
large loans in small numbers to minimize administration costs. They also look for collateral
with a clear title - which many low-income households do not have. In addition bankers tend
to consider low income households a bad risk imposing exceedingly high information
monitoring costs on operation. Over the last ten years, however, successful experiences in
providing finance to small entrepreneur and producers demonstrate that poor people, when
given access to responsive and timely financial services at market rates, repay their loans anduse the proceeds to increase their income and assets. This is not surprising since the only
realistic alternative for them is to borrow from informal market at an interest much higher
than market rates. Community banks, NGOs and grassroots savings and credit groups around
the world have shown that these microenterprise loans can be profitable for borrowers and for
the lenders, making microfinance one of the most effective poverty reducing strategies.
Savings facilities make large scale lending operations possible. On the other hand, studies
also show that the poor operating in the informal sector do save, although not in financial
assets, and hence value access to client-friendly savings service at least as much access to
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credit. Savings mobilization also makes financial institutions accountable to local
shareholders. Therefore, adequate savings facilities both serve the demand for financial
services by the customers and fulfill an important requirement of financial sustainability to
the lenders.
To the extent that microfinance institutions become financially viable, self sustaining, and
integral to the communities in which they operate, they have the potential to attract more
resources and expand services to clients. Despite the success of microfinance institutions,
only about 2% of world's roughly 500 million small entrepreneurs are estimated to have
access to financial services (Barry et al. 1996). Although there is demand for credit by poor
and women at market interest rates, the volume of financial transaction of microfinanceinstitution must reach a certain level before their financial operation becomes self sustaining.
In other words, although microfinance offers a promising institutional structure to provide
access to credit to the poor, the scale problem needs to be resolved so that it can reach the
vast majority of potential customers who demand access to credit at market rates. The
question then is how microenterprise lending geared to providing short term capital to small
businesses in the informal sector can be sustained as an integral part of the financial sector
and how their financial services can be further expanded using the principles, standards and
modalities that have proven to be effective.
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DISCUSSION & METHODOLOGY
An important feature of microfinance in India is the success of various operating models.
From the imported model of joint liability groups (JLGs) to domestically developed self-help
groups (SHGs), many urban MFIs have opted to implement activities through peer-based
lending. As explained below, some practitioners have even chosen to work as cooperatives,
thereby not only providing members access to financial services but preparing them to
understand and take part in household and decision-making. The JLG model pioneered in
Bangladesh is based on the Grameen Banks model, which involves issuing group credit with
joint liability. According to the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development
(NABARD), the main purpose of JLGs is to facilitate mutual guaranteeing and execution
of a joint liability agreement making members jointly liable for interest payments and loan
repayments obtained from a MFI. JLG management is intended to be simple, with little or no
financial administration within the group. The benefits of this model include reduced
transaction costs for both lenders and borrowers. MFIs gain by having to handle only a single
group account instead of a large number of small individual accounts; borrowers benefit by
reducing travel expenses to and from local branches in addition to lessening the amount of
time needed to complete paperwork to obtain the loan. But with all these measures farmers
and poor people started committing suicide due to various reasons. Several responses came
from major financial institutions such as ICICI which served as a model which Separates risk
of MFI from risk inherent in the mf portfolio Provides a mechanisms to banks to
continuously incentivize partners inability of MFIs to provide risk capital in large quantum,which limited advances from banks. There is an underlying business model in the MFIs
expansion: no reason why it cannot be funded by commercial debt. Borrowers demand.
While MFIs currently serve an estimated 100 million micro-borrowers, the total potential
demand is roughly estimated at 1 bn. This ratio illustrates the considerable unexplored growth
potential. In geographic terms, the untapped demand is unevenly spread around the globe.
The largest fraction of poor people is located in India (~310 m), Bangladesh (~70 m),
Indonesia (~60 m), Nigeria (~45 m) and Brazil (~40 m). Assuming that national poverty rates
are related to the portion of the population that already has access to microfinance services,
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penetration rates for different countries can be computed. While the penetration rate is the
highest in Bangladesh at 35% it is as little as 2 to 3% in India, Brazil and Nigeria, i.e. in these
countries only two to three persons out of a hundred are already served with microfinance
while 97-98 people are potentially in need of it. To meet demand fully over the long run a
total funding mix of debt, subordinated debt, equity, deposits and guarantees for MFIs of
roughly USD 275 bn would be required. In the light of the current level of microfinance loans
outstanding of around USD 25 bn, a funding gap of USD 250 bn results. Borrowers demand.
While MFIs currently serve an estimated 100 million micro-borrowers, the total potential
demand is roughly estimated at 1 bn. This ratio illustrates the considerable unexplored growth
potential. In geographic terms, the untapped demand is unevenly spread around the globe.
The largest fraction of poor people is located in India (~310 m), Bangladesh (~70 m),
Indonesia (~60 m), Nigeria (~45 m) and Brazil (~40 m). Assuming that national poverty rates
are related to the portion of the population that already has access to microfinance services,
penetration rates for different countries can be computed. While the penetration rate is the
highest in Bangladesh at 35% it is as little as 2 to 3% in India, Brazil and Nigeria, i.e. in these
countries only two to three persons out of a hundred are already served with microfinance
while 97-98 people are potentially in need of it. To meet demand fully over the long run a
total funding mix of debt, subordinated debt, equity, deposits and guarantees for MFIs of
Roughly USD 275 bn would be required. In the light of the current level of microfinance
loans outstanding of around USD 25 bn, a funding gap of USD 250 bn results. Debt, equity,
deposits and guarantees for MFIs of roughly USD 275 bn would be required. In the light of
the current level of microfinance loans outstanding of around USD 25 bn, a funding gap of
USD 250 bn results.
Also the recent microfinance crisis in Andhra Pradesh has laid bare a fundamental mismatchbetween instruments and objectives. Directed credit such as microfinance or its broader
counterpart called the priority-sector lending is economically justified only if the beneficiary
entities use it to finance projects that are profitable at the market rate of interest but go
unfounded by the market. When this condition is satisfied, on average, we would observe the
same default rates on directed credit as on market-driven credit.
But the high rates of default and repeated loan waivers point to the failure of microcredit to
satisfy this condition. Indeed, prima facie, the availability of profitable projects in rural
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Andhra Pradesh at the market interest rate on a scale commensurate with the current volume
of microcredit lending would seem to be highly improbable. A plausible conclusion is that at
least in rural areas the principal aim of microcredit is not to correct a market failure in the
credit markets.
The argument made here is not intended to suggest that credit markets are working perfectly
in rural India and no government intervention is required. Instead, it calls for a better
alignment of objectives and policy instruments. Where the issue is to assist the poor rather
than supporting profitable activities that the market fails to finance, adequate income
transfers - entirely feasible in view of increased GDP and continued high rates of growth - are
the proper instrument. Indeed, these transfers will even confer a by-product benefit related to
the credit market: they will significantly cut the dependence of the poor on the moneylender.
In so far as credit-market imperfections are concerned, careful thinking is required to reform
the current system.
The existing providers of microcredit fall into three broad categories: SHGs, microfinance
institutions (MFIs) and the village moneylender. The form these providers take varies across
states, sometimes even across regions within the same state. Any policy reform must take into
account these differences in local conditions and must be designed at the level of the state.
Here I offer some tentative thoughts taking Andhra Pradesh as the context.
In Andhra Pradesh, the government has been the principal promoter of SHGs. This fact
partially, though not wholly, explains the government's hostility towards MFIs that have
largely non-governmental origins. These latter initially grew as extensions of the non-governmental organizations (NGOs). Banks with priority sector-lending targets and donors
keen to promote microfinance found it difficult to lend their funds to numerous small
borrowers. Instead, they found it more cost-effective to loan their funds to NGO-cum-MFIs,
which had the local knowledge of potential borrowers. Initially, MFIs operated as non-profit
entities. But over time many responded to the calls for the adoption of the full-cost-recovery
model in order to scale up their operations and eventually became for-profit entities. Today,
the market includes some very large and highly aggressive for-profit MFIs.
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CONCLUSION
The microfinance institutions can contribute a lot to eradicate poverty from the economy. But
there are certain steps/measures are needed to attain inclusive growth. The challenge lies in
finding the level of flexibility in the credit instrument that could make it match the multiple
credit requirements of the low income borrowers without imposing unbearably high cost of
monitoring its end-use upon the lenders. A promising solution is to provide multi-purpose
loans or composite credit for income generation, housing improvement and consumption
support. Indias poor vary from self-employed vegetable vendors and small shop owners to
salaried employees working as maids, cooks, and factory-workers. In spite of the large
network of bank branches and ATMs that exist in cities, many of the poor find their financial
needs largely unmet. Reasons such as a lack of documentation, regular incomes, and a low
degree of comfort in visiting banks for transactions help explain why the urban poor feel
forced to rely on informal credit from moneylenders who demand interest as high as 10% per
day from borrowers. In fact, the lack of access to basic services and productive inputs, trading
spaces for vendors, and skill and livelihood training further pushes the poor into poverty, in
spite of their status as an essential component of the countrys workforce.
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REFERENCES
i. Agriculturejournals.cz
ii. IFMR research by Sudha Krishnan pg no. 11
iii. Adams, Dale W. , Taking a fresh look at informal finance, in Informal finance in
low income countries, ed. Dale Adams and D Fitchett (Oxford: West view Press,
1992).
iv. Sa-Dhan: Enhancing Financial Flows to the Poor: The Way Forward Summary ofthe Sub-Group Reports Presented to the Empowered Committee on Financial Flows
to the Unorganized Sector. New Delhi: Sa-Dhan.
v. NABARD website.
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AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Vivek Siddharth is a BBA final year student studying at Institute of Technology & Science.
He has excellent academic record securing scholarship successively for two years in a
category for the top candidate in the programme. He has won several prizes in business plan,
debate, extempore, inter quiz competition.
Shashank Vikram Singh is a BBA final year student studying at institute of Technology &
Science. He has excellent academic records and has participated in various extra co-curricular
activities.