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UNITED NATIONS CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT FUND Microfinance |
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Voices of Microfinance Thank you to all those who contributed their expertise to provide valuable insight into the following question: **What do you consider
the most innovative advancements in microfinance in the last five years and
how have they changed the industry? I consider the implementation of
on-line/web based Microfinance Credit Bureaus in unregulated microfinance markets,
such as in the Nicaraguan MFI industry, as a big innovation. For most regulated
MFIs, checking the credit rate of potential clients at their National Credit
Bureaus is rather a mandatory, zero-value-added task, due to the nature of the
target segment –most of their clients do not (or should not) have any
record to show. The fact that unregulated MFIs are taking the initiative of
building-up such databases, will surely help maintain safer portfolios at the
industry level –regulated MFIs also benefit from Microfinance Credit Bureaus-
by reducing credit risk and over-indebtedness from clients, and avoiding experiences
such as the one occurred in the Bolivian MFI industry in 1999. — Francisco Olivares-Polanco
— Marc
Jacquand The group dynamics, thrift and
credit, supplemented by credit from a large number of State owned banks
has linked ELEVEN million Self help Groups in INDIA with the Formal Financial
Institutes (FFI) benefiting 176 million families or 680 million individuals
which did not have access to the FFIs earlier. This is the largest microfinance
program in the world. — Sukhbir
Singh The most innovative advancement in the last five years is the introduction of palmtop and smart cards, which improved the:
— Siddiga
Ahmedova During the last five years there has been an emergence of appropriate technology to help manage in the microfinance environment. The pace of innovation in database systems to keep track of transactions now makes it possible to scale up without running into the diseconomies of scale (which are very real and not often talked about). Because of ICT it is now possible to have small loans, small interest, and be able to cover costs. What is interesting is that the technology continues to move forward (Moore's Law is still at work) and it will soon be possible to have high security financial information flowing over mobile wireless telephone infrastructure with advanced identification authentication. What this technology enables is small loans that are appropriate in scale, and very large numbers of clients, and a management process that does not lose control. The economic model that becomes possible is one where value is not consumed in the administration of the loan, but goes into real economic value progress ... and the institution can puts its efforts into helping make its clients successful, rather than putting resources into the bookkeeping back-office. Hopefully this technology will out an end to the idea that little loans should be grants because we cannot afford to do the accounting for them as loans, with all that that implies. — Peter
Burgess A —
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