Professional Documents
Culture Documents
On
A critical analysis of Micro finance in India
Submitted to university of Mumbai in
Partial fulfilment
Of the requirement of the degree of
TY. BACHELOR OF FINANCIAL MARKETS
Under guidance of
PROF. NITIN PAGI
VPMS
K.G. Joshi College of arts
N.G. Bedekar College of commerce
Thane (w)
Academic year: 2015-2016
By:Manish Yadav
Roll. No. 46
DECLARATION
I am Manish Yadav studying in TY. Financial Markets hereby declares that I have
done my project on micro finance. As required by the university rules, I state that
the work presented in this project is original and genuine to the best of the
knowledge.
Whenever references have been made to the work of other, it is clearly indicated in
the source of information in reference.
Student
(Manish Yadav)
Place: Thane
Date:
ACKNOWLEDEGEMENT
It gives me an immense pleasure to declare that my project on MICRO FINANCE have been
prepared purely from the point of view of a students requirement.
I am indebted to our principal Dr. Mrs. Shakuntala Singh madam for giving such an awesome
opportunity. I am also thankful to our coordinator Mr. D.M. Murdeshwar sir and also Liberian
and my colleagues for their valuable support, cooperation and encouragement in completing my
project.
Special thanks to Prof. Ms. Archana Nair madam my internal guide for this project for giving me
expert guidance, full support and encouragement in completing my project successfully.
I also take the opportunity to thank my parents for giving me guidance and for their patience and
understanding me while I am busy in my project work.
Lastly, I am thankful to God for giving me strength, spirit and also his blessings for completing
my project successfully.
Introduction
1.1 Microfinance Definition
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5.2 Bandhan
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References
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Chapter 1: Introduction
Microfinance is defined as any activity that includes the provision of financial services such as
credit, savings, and insurance to low income individuals which fall just above the nationally
defined poverty line, and poor individuals which fall below that poverty line, with the goal of
creating social value. The creation of social value includes poverty alleviation and the broader
impact of improving livelihood opportunities through the provision of capital for micro
enterprise, and insurance and savings for risk mitigation and consumption smoothing. A large
variety of actors provide microfinance in India, using a range of microfinance delivery methods.
Since the ICICI Bank in India, various actors have endeavored to provide access to financial
services to the poor in creative ways. Governments also have piloted national programs, NGOs
have undertaken the activity of raising donor funds for on-lending, and some banks have
partnered with public organizations or made small inroads themselves in providing such services.
This has resulted in a rather broad definition of microfinance as any activity that targets poor and
low-income individuals for the provision of financial services. The range of activities undertaken
in microfinance include group lending, individual lending, the provision of savings and
insurance, capacity building, and agricultural business development services. Whatever the form
of activity however, the overarching goal that unifies all actors in the provision of microfinance
is the creation of social value.
1.1 Microfinance Definition
According to International Labor Organization (ILO), Microfinance is an economic
development approach that involves providing financial services through institutions to low
income clients.
In India, Microfinance has been defined by The National Microfinance Taskforce, 1999 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 poor stay poor, not because they are lazy but because they have no access to capital."
Moreover, informal arrangements may not suitably meet certain financial service needs or may
exclude you anyway. Individuals in this excluded and under-served market segment are the
clients of micro finance.
As we broaden the notion of the types of services micro finance encompasses, the potential
market of micro finance clients also expands. It depends on local conditions and political
climate, activeness of cooperatives, SHG & NGOs and support mechanism. For instance, micro
credit might have a far more limited market scope than say a more diversified range of financial
services, which includes various types of savings products, payment and remittance services, and
various insurance products. For example, many very poor farmers may not really wish to borrow,
but rather, would like a safer place to save the proceeds from their harvest as these are consumed
over several months by the requirements of daily living. Central government in India has
established a strong & extensive link between NABARD (National Bank for Agriculture & Rural
Development), State Cooperative Bank, District Cooperative Banks, Primary Agriculture &
Marketing Societies at national, state, district and village level.
The Need in India
India is said to be the home of one third of the worlds poor; official estimates range
from 26 to 50 percent of the more than one billion population.
The demand for microcredit has been estimated at up to $30 billion; the supply is less
than $2.2 billion combined by all involved in the sector.
Due to the sheer size of the population living in poverty, India is strategically significant in the
global efforts to alleviate poverty and to achieve the Millennium Development Goal of halving
the worlds poverty by 2015. Microfinance has been present in India in one form or another since
the 1970s and is now widely accepted as an effective poverty alleviation strategy. Over the last
five years, the microfinance industry has achieved significant growth in part due to the
participation of commercial banks. Despite this growth, the poverty situation in India continues
to be challenging.
Some principles that summarize a century and a half of development practice were encapsulated
in 2004 by Consultative Group to Assist the Poor (CGAP) and endorsed by the Group of Eight
leaders at the G8 Summit on June 10, 2004:
Poor people need not just loans but also savings, insurance and money transfer
services.
Microfinance must be useful to poor households: helping them raise income, build up
assets and/or cushion themselves against external shocks.
Microfinance can pay for itself. Subsidies from donors and government are scarce
and uncertain, and so to reach large numbers of poor people, microfinance must pay
for itself.
Microfinance also means integrating the financial needs of poor people into a
countrys mainstream financial system.
Donor funds should complement private capital, not compete with it.
The key bottleneck is the shortage of strong institutions and managers. Donors
should focus on capacity building.
Interest rate ceilings hurt poor people by preventing microfinance institutions from
covering their costs, which chokes off the supply of credit.
Microfinance can also be distinguished from charity. It is better to provide grants to families who
are destitute, or so poor they are unlikely to be able to generate the cash flow required to repay a
loan. This situation can occur for example, in a war zone or after a natural disaster.
Financial needs and Financial services
In developing economies and particularly in the rural areas, many activities that would be
classified in the developed world as financial are not monetized: that is, money is not used to
carry them out. Almost by definition, poor people have very little money. But circumstances
often arise in their lives in which they need money or the things money can buy.
In Stuart Rutherfords recent book The Poor and Their Money, he cites several types of needs:
Disasters: such as fires, floods, cyclones and man-made events like war or bulldozing
of dwellings.
Poor people find creative and often collaborative ways to meet these needs, primarily through
creating and exchanging different forms of non-cash value. Common substitutes for cash vary
from country to country but typically include livestock, grains, jewellery and precious metals.
As Marguerite Robinson describes in The Microfinance Revolution, the 1980s demonstrated that
microfinance could provide large-scale outreach profitably, and in the 1990s, microfinance
began to develop as an industry. In the 2000s, the microfinance industrys objective is to satisfy
the unmet demand on a much larger scale, and to play a role in reducing poverty. While much
progress has been made in developing a viable, commercial microfinance sector in the last few
decades, several issues remain that need to be addressed before the industry will be able to
satisfy massive worldwide demand.
The obstacles or challenges to building a sound commercial microfinance industry include:
Institutional inefficiencies
Role of Microfinance:
The micro credit of microfinance progamme was first initiated in the year 1976 in Bangladesh
with promise of providing credit to the poor without collateral , alleviating poverty and
unleashing human creativity and endeavor of the poor people. Microfinance impact studies have
demonstrated that
Microfinance helps poor households meet basic needs and protects them against risks.
The use of financial services by low-income households leads to improvements in household
economic welfare and enterprise stability and growth.
By supporting womens economic participation, microfinance empowers women, thereby
promoting gender-equity and improving household well being.
The level of impact relates to the length of time clients have had access to financial services.
The Origin of Microfinance
Although neither of the terms microcredit or microfinance were used in the academic literature
nor by development aid practitioners before the 1980s or 1990s, respectively, the concept of
providing financial services to low income people is much older.
While the emergence of informal financial institutions in Nigeria dates back to the 15 th century,
they were first established in Europe during the 18th century as a response to the enormous
increase in poverty since the end of the extended European wars (1618 1648). In 1720 the first
loan fund targeting poor people was founded in Ireland by the author Jonathan Swift. After a
special law was passed in 1823, which allowed charity institutions to become formal financial
intermediaries a loan fund board was established in 1836 and a big boom was initiated. Their
outreach peaked just before the government introduced a cap on interest rates in 1843. At this
time, they provided financial services to almost 20% of Irish households. The credit cooperatives
created in Germany in 1847 by Friedrich Wilhelm Raiffeisen served 1.4 million people by 1910.
He stated that the main objectives of these cooperatives should be to control the use made of
money for economic improvements, and to improve the moral and physical values of people and
also, their will to act by themselves.
In the 1880s the British controlled government of Madras in South India, tried to use the German
experience to address poverty which resulted in more than nine million poor Indians belonging to
credit cooperatives by 1946. During this same time the Dutch colonial administrators constructed
a cooperative rural banking system in Indonesia based on the Raiffeisen model which eventually
became Bank Rakyat Indonesia (BRI), now known as the largest MFI in the world.
Microfinance Today
In the 1970s a paradigm shift started to take place. The failure of subsidized government or donor
driven institutions to meet the demand for financial services in developing countries let to several
new approaches. Some of the most prominent ones are presented below.
Bank Dagan Bali (BDB) was established in September 1970 to serve low income people in
Indonesia without any subsidies and is now well-known as the earliest bank to institute
commercial microfinance. While this is not true with regard to the achievements made in
Europe during the 19th century, it still can be seen as a turning point with an ever increasing
impact on the view of politicians and development aid practitioners throughout the world. In
1973 ACCION International, a United States of America (USA) based non governmental
organization (NGO) disbursed its first loan in Brazil and in 1974 Professor Muhammad Yunus
started what later became known as the Grameen Bank by lending a total of $27 to 42 people in
Bangladesh. One year later the Self-Employed Womens Association started to provide loans of
about $1.5 to poor women in India. Although the latter examples still were subsidized projects,
they used a more business oriented approach and showed the world that poor people can be good
credit risks with repayment rates exceeding 95%, even if the interest rate charged is higher than
that of traditional banks. Another milestone was the transformation of BRI starting in 1984. Once
a loss making institution channeling government subsidized credits to inhabitants of rural
Indonesia it is now the largest MFI in the world, being profitable even during the Asian financial
crisis of 1997 1998.
In February 1997 more than 2,900 policymakers, microfinance practitioners and representatives
of various educational institutions and donor agencies from 137 different countries gathered in
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Washington D.C. for the first Micro Credit Summit. This was the start of a nine year long
campaign to reach 100 million of the world poorest households with credit for self employment
by 2005. According to the Microcredit Summit Campaign Report 67,606,080 clients have been
reached through 2527 MFIs by the end of 2002, with 41,594,778 of them being amongst the
poorest before they took their first loan. Since the campaign started the average annual growth
rate in reaching clients has been almost 40 percent. If it has continued at that speed more than
100 million people will have access to microcredit by now and by the end of 2005 the goal of the
microcredit summit campaign would be reached. As the president of the World Bank James
Wolfensohn has pointed out, providing financial services to 100 million of the poorest
households means helping as many as 500 600 million poor people.
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Micro insurance: It is a system by which people, businesses and other organizations make a
payment to share risk. Access to insurance enables entrepreneurs to concentrate more on
developing their businesses while mitigating other risks affecting property, health or the ability to
work.
Remittances: These are transfer of funds from people in one place to people in another, usually
across borders to family and friends. Compared with other sources of capital that can fluctuate
depending on the political or economic climate, remittances are a relatively steady source of
funds.
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At present lending to the economically active poor both rural and urban is pegged at around Rs
7000 crores in the Indian banks credit outstanding. As against this, according to even the most
conservative estimates, the total demand for credit requirements for this part of Indian society is
somewhere around Rs 2,00,000 crores.
Microfinance changing the face of poor India
Micro-Finance is emerging as a powerful instrument for poverty alleviation in the new economy.
In India, micro-Finance scene is dominated by Self Help Groups (SHGs) - Banks linkage
Programme, aimed at providing a cost effective mechanism for providing financial services to
the 'unreached poor'. In the Indian context terms like "small and marginal farmers", " rural
artisans" and "economically weaker sections" have been used to broadly define micro-finance
customers. Research across the globe has shown that, over time, microfinance clients increase
their income and assets, increase the number of years of schooling their children receive, and
improve the health and nutrition of their families.
A more refined model of micro-credit delivery has evolved lately, which emphasizes the
combined delivery of financial services along with technical assistance, and agricultural business
development services. When compared to the wider SHG bank linkage movement in India,
private MFIs have had limited outreach. However, we have seen a recent trend of larger
microfinance institutions transforming into Non-Bank Financial Institutions (NBFCs). This
changing face of microfinance in India appears to be positive in terms of the ability of
microfinance to attract more funds and therefore increase outreach.
In terms of demand for micro-credit or micro-finance, there are three segments, which demand
funds. They are:
At the very bottom in terms of income and assets, are those who are landless and
engaged in agricultural work on a seasonal basis, and manual labourers in forestry,
mining, household industries, construction and transport. This segment requires, first
and foremost, consumption credit during those months when they do not get labour work,
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and for contingencies such as illness. They also need credit for acquiring small
productive assets, such as livestock, using which they can generate additional income.
The next market segment is small and marginal farmers and rural artisans, weavers
and those self-employed in the urban informal sector as hawkers, vendors, and
workers in household micro-enterprises. This segment mainly needs credit for working
capital, a small part of which also serves consumption needs. This segment also needs
term credit for acquiring additional productive assets, such as irrigation pumpsets,
borewells and livestock in case of farmers, and equipment (looms, machinery) and
worksheds in case of non-farm workers.
The third market segment is of small and medium farmers who have gone in for
commercial crops such as surplus paddy and wheat, cotton, groundnut, and others
engaged in dairying, poultry, fishery, etc. Among non-farm activities, this segment
includes those in villages and slums, engaged in processing or manufacturing activity,
running provision stores, repair workshops, tea shops, and various service enterprises.
These persons are not always poor, though they live barely above the poverty line and
also suffer from inadequate access to formal credit.
Well these are the people who require money and with Microfinance it is possible. Right now the
problem is that, it is SHGs' which are doing this and efforts should be made so that the big
financial institutions also turn up and start supplying funds to these people. This will lead to a
better India and will definitely fulfill the dream of our late Prime Minister, Mrs. Indira
Gandhi, i.e. Poverty.
One of the statement is really appropriate here, which is as:
Money, says the proverb makes money. When you have got a little, it is often easy to get
more. The great difficulty is to get that little.Adams Smith.
Today India is facing major problem in reducing poverty. About 25 million people in India are
under below poverty line. With low per capita income, heavy population pressure, prevalence of
massive unemployment and underemployment , low rate of capital formation , misdistribution of
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wealth and assets , prevalence of low technology and poor economics organization and instability
of output of agriculture production and related sectors have made India one of the poor countries
of the world.
Present Scenario of India:
India falls under low income class according to World Bank. It is second populated country in the
world and around 70 % of its population lives in rural area. 60% of people depend on agriculture,
as a result there is chronic underemployment and per capita income is only $ 3262. This is not
enough to provide food to more than one individual . The obvious result is abject poverty , low
rate of education, low sex ratio, exploitation. The major factor account for high incidence of rural
poverty is the low asset base. According to Reserve Bank of India, about 51 % of people house
possess only 10% of the total asset of India .This has resulted low production capacity both in
agriculture (which contribute around 22-25% of GDP ) and Manufacturing sector. Rural people
have very low access to institutionalized credit( from commercial bank).
Poverty alleviation programmes and concepualisation of Microfinance:
There has been continuous efforts of planners of India in addressing the poverty . They Have
come up with development programmes like Integrated Rural Development progamme (IRDP),
National Rural Employment Programme (NREP) , Rural Labour Employment Guarantee
Programme (RLEGP) etc. But these progamme have not been able to create massive impact in
poverty alleviation. The production oriented approach of planning without altering the mode of
production could not but result of the gains of development by owners of instrument of
production. The mode of production does remain same as the owner of the instrument have low
access to credit which is the major factor of production. Thus in Nineties National bank for
agriculture and rural development(NABARD) launches pilot projects of Microfinance to bridge
the gap between demand and supply of funds in the lower rungs of rural economy.
Microfinance . the buzzing word of this decade was meant to cure the illness of rural economy.
With this concept of Self Reliance, Self Sufficiency and Self Help gained momentum. The Indian
microfinance is dominated by Self Help Groups (SHGs) and their linkage to Banks.
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Deprived of the basic banking facilities, the rural and semi urban Indian masses are still relying
on informal financing intermediaries like money lenders, family members, friends etc.
2.1 Distribution of Indebted Rural Households: Agency wise
Credit Agency
Percentage of Rural Households
Government
6.1
Cooperative Societies
21.6
Commercial banks and RRBs
33.7
Insurance
0.3
Provident Fund
0.7
Other Institutional Sources
1.6
All Institutional Agencies
64.0
Landlord
4.0
Agricultural Moneylenders
7.0
Professional Moneylenders
10.5
Relatives and Friends
5.5
Others
9.0
All Non Institutional Agencies
36.0
All Agencies
100.0
Source: Debt and Investment Survey, GoI 1992
Seeing the figures from the above table, it is evident that the share of institutional credit is much
more now.
The above survey result shows that till 1991, institutional credit accounted for around two-thirds
of the credit requirement of rural households. This shows a comparatively better penetration of
the banking and financial institutions in rural India.
Percentage distribution of debt among indebted Rural Labor Households by source of debt
Sr. No.
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Source of debt
Households
With
Withou All
cultivat t
ed land cultiva
ted
land
1
Government 4.99
2
Co-operative 16.78
Societies
5.76
9.46
5.37
13.0
9
Banks
19.91
14.55
17.1
9
4
Employers 5.35
8.33
6.86
5
Money lenders 28.12 35.23 31.7
0
6
Shop-keepers 6.76
7.47
7.13
7 Relatives/Friends 14.58 15.68 15.1
4
8
Other Sources 3.51
3.52
3.52
Total
100.00 100.00 100.
00
Source: Rural labor enquiry report on indebtedness among rural labor households (55 th
Round of N.S.S.) 1999-2000
The table above reveals that most of the rural labour households prefer to raise loan from the
non-institutional sources. About 64% of the total debt requirement of these households was met
by the non-institutional sources during 1999-2000.
(Rs.1918) to the tune of 32% of the total debt of these households as against 28% during 199394.
Relatives and friends and shopkeepers have been two other sources which together accounted for
about 22% of the total debt at all-India level.
The institutional sources could meet only 36% of the total credit requirement of the rural
labour households during 1999-2000 with only one percent increase over the previous survey in
1993-94. Among the institutional sources of debt, the banks continued to be the single largest
source of debt meeting about 17 percent of the total debt requirement of these households. In
comparison to the previous enquiry, the dependence on co-operative societies has increased
considerably in 1999-2000. During 1999-2000 as much as 13% of the debt was raised from this
source as against 8% in 1993-94. However, in the case of the banks and the government
agencies it decreased marginally from 18.88% and 8.27% to 17.19% and 5.37% respectively
during 1999-2000 survey.
2.2 Relative share of Borrowing of Cultivator Households (in per cent)
Sources of Credit
Non Institutional
Of which:
Moneylenders
20
1951
92.7
1961
81.3
1971
68.3
1981
36.8
1991
30.6
2002*
38.9
69.7
49.2
36.1
16.1
17.5
26.8
Institutional
Of which:
Cooperative
7.3
18.7
31.7
63.2
66.3
61.1
3.3
2.6
22.0
29.8
30.0
30.2
35.2
3.1
100.0
26.3
100.0
Societies,etc
Commercial banks
0.9
0.6
2.4
28.8
Unspecified
Total
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
th
* All India Debt and Investment Survey, NSSO, 59 round, 2003
Source: All India Debt and Investment Surveys
Table shows the increasing influence of moneylenders in the last decade. The share of
moneylenders in the total non institutional credit was declining till 1981, started picking up from
the 1990s and reached 27 per cent in 2001.
At the same time the share of commercial banks in institutional credit has come down by almost
the same percentage points during this period. Though, the share of cooperative societies is
increasing continuously, the growth has flattened during the last three decades.
2.3 Distribution based on Asset size of Rural Households (in per cent)
Household Assets (Rs 000)
Institutional Agency
Non-Institutional
All
Less than 5
5-10
10-20
20-30
30-50
50-70
70-100
100-150
150-250
250 and above
All classes
42
47
44
68
55
53
61
61
68
81
66
Agency
58
53
56
32
45
47
39
39
32
19
34
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
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activity is being financed by the banks and whether there exists untapped potential for increasing
deposits in that state.
E.g. In the year 2003-2004 the percentage of bank deposits to NSDP is pretty high at around
75%-80% in Bihar and Jharkhand or these states are not as under banked as thought to be.
2.5 Microfinance Social Aspects
Micro financing institutions significantly contributed to gender equality and womens
empowerment as well as poor development and civil society strengthening. Contribution to
womens ability to earn an income led to their economic empowerment, increased well being of
women and their families and wider social and political empowerment.
Microfinance programs targeting women became a major plank of poverty alleviation and gender
strategies in the 1990s. Increasing evidence of the centrality of gender equality to poverty
reduction and womens higher credit repayment rates led to a general consensus on the
desirability of targeting women.
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Most SHGs in India have 10 to 25 members, who can be either only men, or only women, or
only youth, or a mix of these. As women's SHGs or sangha have been promoted by a wide range
of government and non- governmental agencies, they now make up 90% of all SHGs.
The rules and regulations of SHGs vary according to the preferences of the members and those
facilitating their formation. A common characteristic of the groups is that they meet regularly
(typically once per week or once per fortnight) to collect the savings from members, decide to
which member to give a loan, discuss joint activities (such as training, running of a communal
business, etc.), and to mitigate any conflicts that might arise. Most SHGs have an elected
chairperson, a deputy, a treasurer, and sometimes other office holders.
Most SHGs start without any external financial capital by saving regular contributions by the
members. These contributions can be very small (e.g. 10 Rs per week). After a period of
consistent savings (e.g. 6 months to one year) the SHGs start to give loans from savings in the
form of small internal loans for micro enterprise activities and consumption. Only those SHGs
that have utilized their own funds well are assisted with external funds through linkages with
banks and other financial intermediaries.
However, it is generally accepted that SHGs often do not include the poorest of the poor, for
reasons such as:
(a) Social factors (the poorest are often those who are socially marginalized because of caste
affiliation and those who are most skeptical of the potential benefits of collective action).
(b) Economic factors (the poorest often do not have the financial resources to contribute to the
savings and pay membership fees; they are often the ones who migrate during the lean season,
thus making group membership difficult).
(c) Intrinsic biases of the implementing organizations (as the poorest of the poor are the most
difficult to reach and motivate, implementing agencies tend to leave them out, preferring to focus
on the next wealth category).
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be able to calculate the figures, that the typical micro-enterprise earns well over 500% return on
the small sum invested in it (Harper, M, 1997, p. 15). The groups thus charge themselves high
rates of interest; they are happy to take advantage of the generous spread that the NABARD
subsidized bank lending rate of 12% allows them, but they are also willing to borrow from
NGO/MFIs which on-lend funds from SIDBI at 15%, or from new generation institutions such
as Basix Finance at 18.5% or 21%.
3.4 SHGs-Bank Linkage Model
NABARD is presently operating three models of linkage of banks with SHGs and NGOs:
Model 1: In this model, the bank itself acts as a Self Help Group Promoting Institution (SHPI).
It takes initiatives in forming the groups, nurtures them over a period of time and then provides
credit to them after satisfying itself about their maturity to absorb credit. About 16% of SHGs
and 13% of loan amounts are using this model (as of March 2002).
Model 2: In this model, groups are formed by NGOs (in most of the cases) or by government
agencies. The groups are nurtured and trained by these agencies. The bank then provides credit
directly to the SHGs, after observing their operations and maturity to absorb credit. While the
bank provides loans to the groups directly, the facilitating agencies continue their interactions
with the SHGs. Most linkage experiences begin with this model with NGOs playing a major role.
This model has also been popular and more acceptable to banks, as some of the difficult
functions of social dynamics are externalized. About 75% of SHGs and 78% of loan amounts are
using this model.
Model 3: Due to various reasons, banks in some areas are not in a position to even finance
SHGs promoted and nurtured by other agencies. In such cases, the NGOs act as both facilitators
and micro- finance intermediaries. First, they promote the groups, nurture and train them and
then approach banks for bulk loans for on-lending to the SHGs. About 9% of SHGs and 13% of
loan amounts are using this model.
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27
Number*
400 to 500 Societies Registration Act, 1860 or
similar Provincial Acts
Companies (NBFCs)
Total
Source: NABARD website
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700 - 800
3. Banking Correspondents
The proposal of banking correspondents could take this model a step further extending it to
savings. It would allow MFIs to collect savings deposits from the poor on behalf of the bank. It
would use the ability of the MFI to get close to poor clients while relying on the financial
strength of the bank to safeguard the deposits. This regulation evolved at a time when there were
genuine fears that fly-by-night agents purporting to act on behalf of banks in which the people
have confidence could mobilize savings of gullible public and then vanish with them. It remains
to be seen whether the mechanics of such relationships can be worked out in a way that
minimizes the risk of misuse.
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partnership model: the MFI originates the loans and the bank books them. But in fact, this model
has two very different and interesting operational features:
(a) The MFI uses the branch network of the bank as its outlets to reach clients. This allows theclient
to be reached at lower cost than in the case of a standalone MFI. In case of banks which have
large branch networks, it also allows rapid scale up. In the partnership model, MFIs may contract
with many banks in an arms length relationship. In the service company model, the MFI works
specifically for the bank and develops an intensive operational cooperation between them to their
mutual advantage.
(b) The Partnership model uses both the financial and infrastructure strength of the bank to create
lower cost and faster growth. The Service Company Model has the potential to take the burden of
overseeing microfinance operations off the management of the bank and put it in the hands of
MFI managers who are focused on microfinance to introduce additional products, such as
individual loans for SHG graduates, remittances and so on without disrupting bank operations
and provide a more advantageous cost structure for microfinance.
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Partnership Models
A model of microfinance has emerged in recent years in which a microfinance institution (MFI)
borrows from banks and on-lends to clients; few MFIs have been able to grow beyond a certain
point. Under this model, MFIs are unable to provide risk capital in large quantities, which limits
the advances from banks. In addition, the risk is being entirely borne by the MFI, which limits its
risk-taking.
This model aimed at synergizing the comparative advantages and financial strength of the bank
with social intermediation, mobilization power and infrastructure of MFIs and NGOs. Through
this model, ICICI Bank could save on the initial costs of developing rural infrastructure and
micro credit distribution channels and could take advantage of the expertise of these institutions
in rural areas. Initially, ICICI Bank started off by lending to MFIs and NGOs in order to provide
the necessary financial support to their activities. Later, ICICI Bank came up with a plan where
the NGO/MFI continued to promote their microfinance schemes, while the bank met the
financial requirements of the borrowers.
Other Microfinance Initiatives
As a part of microfinance initiatives in the agriculture sector, ICICI Bank developed Farmer
Service Centers (FSC). An FSC was managed by an agricultural input supply company which
supplied inputs like seeds and technical knowhow to the farmers.
FSCs were also managed by an extension service organization which provided inputs, credit and
technology or by an NGO that provided all the services that farmers needed for their agricultural
needs. Working in close association with farmers, FSCs provided them with services like advice
on seeds, sowing techniques, pest control, weed control, usage and dosage of herbicides,
pesticides and fertilizers and other services associated with agriculture. The FSCs also provided
crop-related information and services to farmers, apart from facilitating the sale of agricultural
produce. The FSCs arranged to procure the produce through agents and sold it in organized
agricultural markets thus getting better realization.
32
The Future
These agents contact several borrowers, thus expanding the reach of ICICI Bank at a low cost.
Taking the FSC initiative further, ICICI Bank plans to provide farmers credit from sugar
companies, seed companies, dairy companies, NGOs, micro-credit institutions and food
processing industries.
SIG has been involved in a project in the southern state of Tamil Nadu to find out how wireless
technology can be applied in the development of low cost models of banking. Another plan to
increase the reach in rural areas is to launch mobile ATM services. ICICI Bank branded trucks
have started carrying ATMs through a number of villages Some Articles of News Paper:
1. ICICI Bank to offer micro-finance to sex-workers
Mumbai, March 14: In a novel way to help sex-workers to live more meaningfully, country's
largest private sector bank, ICICI Bank is planning to offer financial assistance to them though
the micro-finance route.
For starters, the bank plans to launch the programme in Kolkata by entering into a tie-up with
Durbar Mahila Samwanaya Samitee, an NGO working for the welfare of around 65,000
sexworkers in and around the city.
Source: (Press Trust of India) Posted online: Wednesday, March 14, 2007 at 20:54 hours IST
2. ICICI Bank launches new initiative in micro-finance
ICICI Bank has taken a stake of under 20 per cent in Financial Information Network and
Operations Private Ltd (FINO), which was launched on Thursday, July 13, 2001.
FINO would provide technological solutions as well as services to finance providers to reach the
underserved in the country. ICICI Bank is the lead facilitator.
According to Mr Nachiket Mor, Deputy Managing Director, ICICI Bank, FINO is an
independent entity. "We would reduce our stake in the company when required," he said.
33
ICICI Bank expects to target 200 micro-finance institutions (MFIs) by March 2007, he said,
speaking on the sidelines of the press conference to launch FINO. At present, the bank has tieups
with 100 MFIs.
FINO is an initiative in the micro-finance sector. It would target 300-400 million people who do
not have access to basic financial services, said Mr Manish Khera, CEO, FINO. The company
has an authorised capital of Rs 50 crore. MFIs, NBFCs, RRBs, co-operative banks, etc would
directly or indirectly tie up with FINO to use its services, he said. FINO would charge Rs 25-30
per account every year.
Core banking products
FINO has partnered with IBM and i-flex to offer core banking products. It would also provide
credit bureau services, which includes individual customer credit rating and analytics based on
transaction history. It also launched biometric cards for customers, which would be a proof of
identity and give collateral to them. The card would also offer multiple products including
savings, loans, insurance, recurring deposits, fixed deposits and remittances. The company would
also build-up customer database, thus bringing them into mainstream banking.
"There was a need for automated structured data system like FINO," said Mr Mor. "Essential
pieces of infrastructure are missing in India. We lack credit-tracking mechanism; therefore there
was a need for an intervention like FINO."
The company expects to reach 25 million customers in five years and two million customers by
the end of 2007.
FINO aims bringing scale to "micro" business leading to lowering of costs for the local financial
institutions (LFIs) and act as an internal technology department for the LFIs, said Mr Khera.
The company is working on providing technological solutions in insurance, especially the health
insurance sector to the under-privileged," he said. It is interacting with Nabard, SIDBI and other
banks to give shape to what FINO does, said Mr Khera.
34
35
very high leveraging capacity, as the MFI has an assured source of funds for expanding and
deepening credit. ICICI chose this model because it expands the retail operations of the bank by
leveraging comparative advantages of MFIs, while avoiding costs associated with entering the
market directly.
Securitization
Another way to enter into partnership with MFIs is to securitize microfinance portfolios. In 2004,
the largest ever securitization deal in microfinance was signed between ICICI Bank and SHARE
Microfinance Ltd, a large MFI operating in rural areas of the state of Andra Pradesh. Technical
assistance and the collateral deposit of US$325,000 (93% of the guarantee required by ICICI)
were supplied by Grameen Foundation USA. Under this agreement, ICICI purchased a part of
SHAREs microfinance portfolio against a consideration calculated by computing the Net
Present Value of receivables amounting to Rs. 215 million (US$4.9 million) at an agreed
discount rate. The interest paid by SHARE is almost 4% less than the rate paid in commercial
loans. Partial credit provision was provided by SHARE in the form of a guarantee amounting to
8% of the receivables under the portfolio, by way of a lien on fixed deposit. This deal frees up
equity capital, allowing SHARE to scale up its lending. On the other hand, it allows ICICI Bank
to reach new markets. And by trading this high quality asset in capital markets, the bank can
hedge its own risks.
Beyond Microcredit
Microfinance does not only mean microcredit, and ICICI does not limit itself to lending. ICICIs
Social Initiative Group, along with the World Bank and ICICI Lombard, the insurance company
set up by ICICI and Canada Lombard, have developed Indias first index-based insurance
product. This insurance policy compensates the insured against the likelihood of diminished
agricultural output/yield resulting from a shortfall in the anticipated normal rainfall within the
district, subject to a maximum of the sum insured. The insurance policy is linked to a rainfall
index.
36
Technology
One of the main challenges to the growth of the microfinance sector is accessibility. The Indian
context, in which 70% of the population lives in rural areas, requires new, inventive channels of
delivery. The use of technologies such as kiosks and smart cards will considerably reduce
transaction costs while improving access. The ICICI Bank technology team is developing a series
of innovative products that can help reduce transaction costs considerably. For example, it is
piloting the usage of smart cards with Sewa Bank in Ahmedabad. To maximize the benefits of
these innovations, the development of a high quality shared banking technology platform which
can be used by MFIs as well as by cooperatives banks and regional rural banks is needed. ICICI
is strongly encouraging such an effort to take place. Wipro and Infosys, I-Flex, 3iInfotech, some
of the best Indian information technology companies specialized in financial services, and others,
are in the process of developing exactly such a platform. At a recent technology workshop at the
Institute for Financial Management Research in Chennai, the ICICI Bank Alternate Channels
Team presented the benefits of investing in a common technology platform similar to those used
in mainstream banking to some of the most promising MFIs.
The Centre for Microfinance Research
ICICI bank has created the Centre for Microfinance Research (CMFR) at the Institute for
Financial Management Research (IFMR) in Chennai. Through research, research-based
advocacy, high level training and strategy building, it aims to systematically establish the links
between increased access to financial services and the participation of poor people in the larger
economy. The CMFR Research Unit supports initiatives aimed at understanding and analyzing
the following issues: impact of access to financial services; contract and product designs;
constraints to household productivity; combination of microfinance and other development
interventions; evidence of credit constraints; costs and profitability of microfinance
organizations; impact of MFI policies and strategies; peoples behavior and psychology with
respect to financial services; economics of micro-enterprises; and the effect of regulations.
Finally, the CMFR recognizes that while MFIs aim to meet the credit needs of poor households,
there are other missing markets and constraints facing households, such as healthcare,
infrastructure, and gaps in knowledge. These have implications in terms of the scale and
37
profitability of client enterprises and efficiency of household budget allocation, which in turn
impacts household well-being. The CMFR Microfinance Strategy Unit will address these issues
through a series of workshops which will bring together MFI practitioners and sectoral experts
(in energy, water, roads, health, etc). The latter will bring to the table knowledge of best practices
in their specific areas, and each consultation workshop will result in long-term collaboration
between with MFIs for implementing specific pilots.
5.2 Bandhan
(Ranked 2nd by Forbes Magazine in December 2007)
Bandhan is working towards the twin objective of poverty alleviation and women empowerment.
It started as a Capacity Building Institution (CBI) in November 2000 under the leadership of Mr.
Chandra Shekhar Ghosh. During such time, it was giving capacity building support to local
microfinance institutions working in West Bengal.
Bandhan opened its first microfinance branch at Bagnan in Howrah district of West Bengal in
July 2002. Bandhan started with 2 branches in the year 2002-03 only in the state of West Bengal
and today it has grown as strong as 412 branches across 6 states of the country! The organization
had recorded a growth rate of 500% in the year 2003-04 and 611% in the year 2004-05. Till date,
it has disbursed a total of Rs. 587 crores among almost 7 lakh poor women. Loan outstanding
38
stands at Rs. 221 crores. The repayment rate is recorded at 99.99%. Bandhan has staff strength of
more than 2130 employees.
As on July 2008
Column1
Column2
No. of states
No. of branches
No. of members
No. of staff
Cumulative loan disbursed
Loan outstanding
:8
: 528
: 1,182,741
: 3,191
: Rs.1,249 crores
: Rs. 417 crores
Operational Methodology
Bandhan follows a group formation, individual lending approach. A group of 10-25 members are
formed. The clients have to attend the group meetings for 2 successive weeks. 2 weeks hence,
they are entitled to receive loans. The loans are disbursed individually and directly to the
members.
Family of 5 members with monthly income less than Rs. 2,500 in rural and Rs.
3,500 in urban
Those who do not own more than 50 decimal (1/2acre) of land or capital of its
equivalent value
Loan Size
The first loan is between Rs. 1,000 Rs. 7,000 for the rural areas and between Rs. 1,000 Rs.
10,000 for the urban areas. After the repayment, they are entitled to receive a subsequent loan
which is Rs 1,000 - 5,000 more than the previous loan.
Service Charge
Bandhan charges a service charge of 12.50% flat on loan amount. Bandhan initially charged
39
17.50%. However from 1st July 2005, it has slashed down its lending rate to 15.00%. Then it was
further reduced to 12.50% in May 2006. The reason is obvious. As overall productivity
increased, operational costs decreased. Bandhan, being a non profit organization wanted the
benefit of low costs to ultimately trickle down to the poor.
Monitoring System
The various features of the monitoring system are:
40
The Grameen model follows a fairly regimented routine. It is very cost intensive as it involves
building capacity of the groups and the customers passing a test before the lending could start.
The group members tend to be selected or at least strongly vetted by the bank. One of the reasons
for the high cost is that staff members can conduct only two meetings a day and thus are
occupied for only a few hours, usually early morning or late in the evening. They were used
additionally for accounting work, but that can now be done more cost effectively using
computers. The model is also rather meeting intensive which is fine as long as the members have
no alternative use for their time but can be a problem as members go up the income ladder.
The greatness of the Grameen model is in the simplicity of design of products and delivery. The
process of delivery is scalable and the model could be replicated widely. The focus on the
poorest, which is a value attribute of Grameen, has also made the model a favourite among the
donor community.
However, the Grameen model works only under certain assumptions. As all the loans are only for
enterprise promotion, it assumes that all the poor want to be self-employed. The repayment of
loans starts the week after the loan is disbursed the inherent assumption being that the
borrowers can service their loan from the ex-ante income.
5.4 SKS Microfinance
(CEO-Vikram Akula)
Many companies say they protect the interests of their customers. Very few actually sit in dirt
with them, using stones, flowers, sticks, and chalk powder to figure out if they will be able to
repay a $20 loan at $1 a month. With this approach, this company has created its own loyal gang
of over 2 million customers.
41
Its borrowers include agricultural laborers, mom-and-pop entrepreneurs, street vendors, home
based artisans, and small scale producers, each living on less than $2 a day. It works on a model
that would allow micro-finance institutions to scale up quickly so that they would never have to
turn poor person away.
Its model is based on 3 principles1. Adopt a profit-oriented approach in order to access commercial capital- Starting
with the pitch that there is a high entrepreneurial spirit amongst the poor to raise the
funds, SKS converted itself to for-profit status as soon as it got break even and got
philanthropist Ravi Reddy to be a founding investor. Then it secured money from parties
such as Unitus, a Seattle based NGO that helps promote micro-finance; SIDBI; and
technology entrepreneur Vinod Khosla. Later, it was able to attract multimillion dollar
lines of credit from Citibank, ABN Amro, and others.
2. Standardize products, training, and other processes in order to boost capacity- They
suited its requirements, so it they built their own simple and user friendly applications
that a computer-illiterate loan officer with a 12 th grade education can easily understand.
The system is also internet enabled. Given that electricity is unreliable in many areas they
have installed car batteries or gas powered generators as back-ups in many areas.
Scaling up Customer Loyalty
Instead of asking illiterate villagers to describe their seasonal pattern of cash flows, they
encourage them to use colored chalk powder and flowers to map out the village on the
ground and tell where the poorest people lived, what kind of financial products they needed,
which areas were lorded over by which loan sharks, etc. They set peoples tiny weekly
42
repayments as low as $1 per week and health and whole life insurance premiums to be $10 a
year and 25 cents per week respectively. They also offer interest free emergency loans. The
salaries of loan officers are not tied to repayment rates and they journey on mopeds to
borrowers villages and schedule loan meetings as early as 7.00 A.M. Deep customer loyalty
ultimately results in a repayment rate of 99.5%.
Leveraging the SKS brand
Its payoff comes from high volumes. They are growing at 200% annually, adding 50
branches and 1,60,000 new customers a month. They are also using their deep distribution
channels for selling soap, clothes, consumer electronics and other packaged goods.
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4. Apni Mandi
Another innovation is that of The Punjab Mandi Board, which has experimented with a farmers
market to provide small farmers located in proximity to urban areas, direct access to consumers
by elimination of middlemen. This experiment known as "Apni Mandi" belongs to both farmers
and consumers, who mutually help each other. Under this arrangement a sum of Rs. 5.2 lakh is
spent for providing plastic crates to 1000 farmers. Each farmer gets 5 crates at a subsidized rate.
At the mandi site, the Board provides basic infrastructure facilities. At the farm level, extension
services of different agencies are pooled in. These include inputs subsidies, better quality seeds
and loans from Banks. Apni Mandi scheme provides self-employment to producers and has
eliminated social inhibitions among them regarding the retail sale of their produce.
44
loans can be profitable for borrowers and for the lenders, making microfinance one of the most
effective poverty reducing strategies.
A. For NGOs
1. The field of development itself expands and shifts emphasis with the pull of ideas, and
NGOs perhaps more readily adopt new ideas, especially if the resources required are
small, entry and exit are easy, tasks are (perceived to be) simple and peoples acceptance
is high all characteristics (real or presumed) of microfinance.
2. Canvassing by various actors, including the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural
Development (NABARD), Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI), Friends
of Womens World Banking (FWWB), Rashtriya Mahila Kosh (RMK), Council for
Advancement of Peoples Action and Rural Technologies (CAPART), Rashtriya Gramin
Vikas Nidhi (RGVN), various donor funded programmes especially by the International
Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP), World Bank and Department for International Development, UK (DFID)], and
lately commercial banks, has greatly added to the idea pull. Induced by the worldwide
focus on microfinance, donor NGOs too have been funding microfinance projects. One
might call it the supply push.
3. All kinds of things from khadi spinning to Nadep compost to balwadis do not produce
such concrete results and sustained interest among beneficiaries as microfinance. Most
NGO-led microfinance is with poor women, for whom access to small loans to meet dire
emergencies is a valued outcome. Thus, quick and high customer satisfaction is the USP
that has attracted NGOs to this trade.
4. The idea appears simple to implement. The most common route followed by NGOs is
promotion of SHGs. It is implicitly assumed that no technical skill is involved. Besides,
external resources are not needed as SHGs begin with their own savings. Those NGOs
that have access to revolving funds from donors do not have to worry about financial
45
performance any way. The chickens will eventually come home to roost but in the first
flush, it seems all so easy.
5. For many NGOs the idea of organising forming a samuha has inherent appeal.
Groups connote empowerment and organising women is a double bonus.
46
hundred such programmes were conducted by NGOs alone, each involving 15 to 20 bank staff,
all paid for by NABARD. The policy push was sweetened by the NABARD refinance scheme
that offers much more favourable terms (100% refinance, wider spread) than for other rural
lending by banks. NABARD also did some system setting work and banks lately have been
given targets. The canvassing, training, refinance and close follow up by NABARD has resulted
in widespread bank involvement.
Moreover, for banks the operating cost of microfinance is perhaps much less than for pure MFIs.
The banks already have a vast network of branches. To the extent that an NGO has already
promoted SHGs and the SHG portfolio is performing better than the rest of the rural (if not the
entire) portfolio, microfinance via SHGs in the worst case would represent marginal addition to
cost and would often reduce marginal cost through better capacity utilisation. In the process the
bank also earns brownie points with policy makers and meets its priority sector targets.
It does not take much analysis to figure out that the market for financial services for the 50-60
million poor households of India, coupled with about the same number who are technically
above the poverty line but are severely under-served by the financial sector, is a very large one.
Moreover, as in any emerging market, though the perceived risks are higher, the spreads are
much greater. The traditional commercial markets of corporates, business, trade, and now even
housing and consumer finance are being sought by all the banks, leading to price competition
and wafer thin spreads.
Further, bank-groups are motivated by a number of cross-selling opportunities in the market, for
deposits, insurance, remittances and eventually mutual funds. Since the larger banks are offering
all these services now through their group companies, it becomes imperative for them to expand
their distribution channels as far and deep as possible, in the hope of capturing the entire
financial services business of a household.
Finally, both agri-input and processing companies such as EID Parry, fast-moving consumer
goods (FMCG) companies such as Hindustan Levers, and consumer durable companies such as
Philips have realised the potential of this big market and are actively using SHGs as entry points.
47
Some amount of free-riding is taking place here by companies, for they are using channels which
were built at a significant cost to NGOs, funding agencies and/or the government.
On the whole, the economic attractiveness of microfinance as a business is getting established
and this is a sure step towards mainstreaming. We know that mainstreaming is a mixed blessing,
and one tends to exchange scale at the cost of objectives. So it needs to be watched carefully.
48
Chapter 8
Issues in Microfinance
1. Sustainability
The first challenge relates to sustainability. MFI model is comparatively costlier in terms of
delivery of financial services. An analysis of 36 leading MFIs by Jindal & Sharma shows that
89% MFIs sample were subsidy dependent and only 9 were able to cover more than 80% of
their costs. This is partly explained by the fact that while the cost of supervision of credit is
high, the loan volumes and loan size is low. It has also been commented that MFIs pass on
the higher cost of credit to their clients who are interest insensitive for small loans but may
not be so as loan sizes increase. It is, therefore, necessary for MFIs to develop strategies for
increasing the range and volume of their financial services.
2. Lack of Capital
The second area of concern for MFIs, which are on the growth path, is that they face a
paucity of owned funds. This is a critical constraint in their being able to scale up. Many of
the MFIs are socially oriented institutions and do not have adequate access to financial
capital. As a result they have high debt equity ratios. Presently, there is no reliable
mechanism in the country for meeting the equity requirements of MFIs.
The IPO issue by Mexico based Compartamos was not accepted by purists as they thought
it defied the mission of an MFI. The IPO also brought forth the issue of valuation of an MFI.
The book value multiple is currently the dominant valuation methodology in microfinance
investments. In the case of start up MFIs, using a book value multiple does not do justice to
the underlying value of the business. Typically, start ups are loss making and hence the book
value continually reduces over time until they hit break even point. A book value multiplier
to value start ups would decrease the value as the organization uses up capital to build its
business, thus accentuating the negative rather than the positive.
49
50
51
5. Microinsurance
First big issue in the microinsurance sector is developing products that really respond to the
needs of clients and in a way that is commercially viable.
Secondly, there is strong need to enhance delivery channels. These delivery channels have
been relatively weak so far. Microinsurance companies offer minimal products and do not
want to go forward and offer complex products that may respond better. Microinsurance
needs a delivery channel that has easy access to the low-income market, and preferably one
that has been engaged in financial transactions so that they have controls for managing cash
and the ability to track different individuals.
Thirdly, there is a need for market education. People either have no information about
microinsurance or they have a negative attitude towards it. We have to counter that. We have
to somehow get people - without having to sit down at a table - to understand what insurance
is, and why it benefits them. That will help to demystify microinsurance so that when agents
come, people are willing to engage with them.
6. Adverse selection and moral hazard
The joint liability mechanism has been relied upon to overcome the twin issues of adverse
selection and moral hazard. The group lending models are contingent on the availability of
skilled resources for group promotion and entail a gestation period of six months to one year.
However, there is not sufficient understanding of the drivers of default and credit risk at the
level of the individual. This has constrained the development of individual models of micro
finance. The group model was an innovation to overcome the specific issue of the quality of
the portfolio, given the inability of the poor to offer collateral. However, from the perspective
of scaling up micro financial services, it is important to proactively discover models that will
enable direct finance to individuals.
References
1. de Aghion, Beatriz Armendriz & Jonathan Morduch. The Economics of
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Microfinance,
2. Dichter, Thomas and Malcolm Harper (eds). Whats Wrong with Microfinance? Practical
Action, 2007.
3. Ledgerwood, Joanna and Victoria White. Transforming Microfinance Institutions:
Calmeadow.
7. Connell, Martin. 1998. Private Equity Capital in the microfinance Industry. In Craig
practices with non-timber forest products from dipterocarps: Lessons from India by B.P.
Pethiya.
11.India microfinance Investment Environment Profile by Slavea Chankova, Nathanael
53
16. Raven Smith, The Changing Face of Microfinance in India- The costs and benefits of
transforming from an NGO to a NBFC, 2006
17. R Srinivasan and M S Sriram, Microfinance in India- Discussion
18. Piyush Tiwari and S M Fahad, HDFC, Concept paper- Microfinance Institutions in
India
19.Barbara Adolph,DFID, Rural Non Farm Economy: Access Factors, February, 2003
20. Shri Y S P Thorat, Managing Director, NABARD, Innovation in Product Design, Credit
Delivery and Technology to reach small farmers, November, 2005
21. Shri Y S P Thorat, Managing Director, NABARD, Microfinance in India: Sectoral
Issues and Challenges, May, 2005
22. Dr. C Rangarajan, Chairman, Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister,
Microfinance and its Future Directions, May, 2005
23. Report, Status of Microfinance in India 2006-2007, NABARD
24. Bindu Ananth and Soju Annie George, Microfinancial Services Team of Social Initiatives
Group, ICICI Bank, Scaling up Microfinancial Services: An overview of challenges and
Opportunities, August, 2003
25. Annie Duflo, Research Co-ordinator, Centre for Micro Finance Research, ICICI Banks
the poor in India, Page 13, Microfinance Matters, Issue 17, October 2005
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