16
MICROFINANCE SUBMITTED BY KARTIK PRAKASH 20135028

Microfinance India

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Summary about Microfinance in India

Citation preview

Page 1: Microfinance India

MICROFINANCESUBMITTED BY KARTIK PRAKASH

20135028

Page 2: Microfinance India

MICROFINANCE: THE PARADIGM

• In 1976, Dr Mohammed Yunus came up with the concept of lending to groups of poor women.

• This group was loaned money without any collateral but with high interest rates of 20-24 percent.

• If any group member defaulted, the group was denied further credit.

• This joint liability produced a very high repayment rate of 98 percent.

Page 3: Microfinance India

MICROFINANCE: THE PARADIGM

• In Grameen Bank Model, members of the groups are also the owners of the bank.

• The loan is given based on trust and no agreement or document is required.

• This pioneering experiment cam eto be later known as “Microfinance”.

• The Grameen bank lends US$ 30 million a month to 1.8 million needy borrowers.

• Today, there are over 7000 microfinance institutions across the globe, serving 16 million poor households.

Page 4: Microfinance India

INTRODUCTION

• Microfinance is provision of financial services to the poor. These financial services may take form of micro-savings, micro-credit, micro-insurance.

• The Task Force on Supportive Policy and Regulatory Framework for Microfinance (NABARD) 1999 defines microfinance as ‘Provision of thrift, credit and other financial services and products of very small amounts to the poor in rural, semi-urban or urban areas for enabling them to raise their income levels and improve living standards.

• The clients of microfinance, are landless labors, small marginal farmers, rural artisans and weavers, self-employed, and women.

Page 5: Microfinance India

MICROFINANCE IN INDIA

• Shree Mahila SEWA Sahakari Bank in Ahmedabad and Working women’s Forum in Tamil Nadu were the pioneers in 1970s.

• The SEWA Bank was setup in 1974 as an Urban Cooperative Bank providing banking services to the poor self-employed women. It has deposits over Rs100 crore, mobilized from nearly 2,50,000 women.

• NABARD designed the SHG-Bank linkage concept wherein the SHGs are linked with banks for funds.

Page 6: Microfinance India

NGO AND SHG

• NGOs are the key players in the microfinance sector. It undertakes social intermediation like organizing SHGs of micro-entrepreneurs and entrusting them to banks for credit linkage or financial intermediation, like borrowing in bulk funds from banks for on-lending to SHGs.

• SHG is a group of 15-20 members who have voluntarily come together to save small amounts regularly to meet their emergency needs on mutual-help basis.

Page 7: Microfinance India

MICROFINANCE DELIVERY MECHANISMS

• Conventional Weaker-section Lending by Banks.

• MFIs

• SHG-bank linkage programmes.

Page 8: Microfinance India

CONVENTIONAL WEAKER-SECTION LENDING BY BANKS

• The cooperative banks and regional banks were set up specifically to cater to the needs of rural as well as urban poor.

• The commercial banks got motivated by the success of many MFIs and SHG-Bank linkage programmes and now actively participate in Microfinance.

• ICICI Bank is a prominent player. It has doubled its rural microfinance and agricultural business loans. It has partnered with around 400 MFIs.

Page 9: Microfinance India

MICROFINANCE INSTITUTIONS

• NABARD defines MFIs as ‘those which provide thrift, credit and other financial services and products of very small amounts, mainly to the poor in rural, semi-urban or urban areas, for enabling them to raise income level and improve living standards.’

• MFIs can be classified as:

• Not-for-profit MFIs

• Mutual-benefit MFIs

• For-Profit MFIs

• Cooperative MFIs

Page 10: Microfinance India

SHG-BANK LINKAGE PROGRAMME

• This model has attracted attention as a possible way of delivering micro-finance services to poor populations that have been difficult to reach directly through banks or other institutions.

• By aggregating their individual savings into a single deposit, self-help groups minimize the bank's transaction costs and generate an attractive volume of deposits. Through self-help groups the bank can serve small rural depositors while paying them a market rate of interest.

• NABARD estimates that there are 2.2 million SHGs in India, representing 33 million members, that have taken loans from banks under its linkage program to date.

Page 11: Microfinance India

SHG-BANK LINKAGE PROGRAMME

• NABARD operates three models under this programme:

• Model I-SHGs are formed and financed by banks. No NGO intervention.

• Model II- NGOs will promote SHGs and link them with the banks.

• Model III- The SHGs are financed by NGOs.

Page 12: Microfinance India

RESOURCES FOR SUPPORTING MICROFINANCE

• Microfinance Development Fund:

• It was set up for promotion and development of microfinance sector with initial contribution of Rs100 crores.

• This fund supports following activities:

• Training

• Providing start up funds.

• Meeting cost of formation and nurturing of SHGs.

• Designing new delivery mechanisms

• Promoting research

Page 13: Microfinance India

RESOURCES FOR SUPPORTING MICROFINANCE

• Collaboration with External agencies:

• NABARD has collaborated with external agencies such as SDC and GTZ.

• Objective was to improve efficiency of credit delivery and capacity building.

• SIDBI is one of the largest providers of microfinance through MFIs.

Page 14: Microfinance India

THE POSITIVE SIDE OF MICROFINANCE

• The success of SHG-bank linkage programme has proved that poor are credit worthy and bankable.

• It has reduced household vulnerability to risks, provide higher income and greater security.

• Corporates such as HLL have successfully penetrated the rural markets through SHGs.

Page 15: Microfinance India

THE DOWNSIDE OF MICROFINANCE

• High interest rates charged by MFIs.

• Unethical recovery methods.

• Lack of transparency and absence of governance structure.

• The growth of microfinance is skewed with large proportion in southern states of India.

Page 16: Microfinance India