Imagine that your maid borrowed Rs 30,000 from you, promising to repay within a year from her monthly wage of Rs 4,000. Do you think you could cut Rs 2,500 from her monthly wages, every month?First of all, do you expect her to repay anything? Would you charge any interest on your lending?Most likely, you might write off the entire amount, considering her child's education and husband's health problems.
Microfinance Institutions (MFI) are in a similar situation. According to the Government of Andhra Pradesh, more than Rs 25,000 crore has been lent to over 80 lakh poor families. On an average each family owes Rs 30,000. Most MFIs charge 27 per cent interest on loans. Some MFIs seem to use strong-arm tactics in loan recovery, with a few reported suicides. The Andhra Pradesh Government reacted with an ordinance to regulate MFIs. Most likely, the MFIs might be forced to write off a big chunk.HOW IT UNRAVELLEDFirst, MFIs were in a hurry to grow fast. SKS Microfinance, a listed company, has grown 90 per cent annually for the last four years (see Table), from just two lakh members to 40 lakh members in less than three years.The loan disbursements have gone up from just Rs 150 crore to over Rs 4,400 crore in three years. Growth prompted investment grades from rating agencies. Whenever loans are disbursed in haste, one can anticipate problems later.Second, the concept of self help group (SHG) was not followed. The concept involves forming groups of 15-20 women, who meet regularly, understand each other's problems and bond for a while. They are expected to save a small amount, keep the money in bank and earn interest.A member could borrow when she falls ill and can't go for work. She would return the money with 18-24 per cent interest to the group. The recovery is almost certain, due to peer pressure and bonding with the group.Such group formation and bonding takes a minimum of six to nine months. The MFI did not have so much time and wanted to grow rapidly in tune with their private equity investors. They went in for the Joint Liability Group (JLG) method. Their agents would persuade five women to form a group and each guaranteed the others' loans. Most members of JLG could not develop the special bonding they would have in SHG.Third, the MFI apparently charged lower interests of 12-18 per cent in JLG, compared with that of 18-24 per cent charged by SHGs primarily run by the PSU banks. MFI interest rates were non-transparent and effective rates often were over 27 per cent, considering loan processing fees, penalties and hidden charges.THE SUBPRIME BUBBLEHow did the borrowers repay? Many adopted what is now known as ‘ever greening' tactics. They would borrow on Mondays from one MFI and repay to the other MFI on Wednesdays. Since all of them were growing with plenty of funds from the private sector banks, the party went on.Of late the PSU banks too joined the party. For instance a major PSU bank that had Rs 1,000 crore exposure to SHG based loans, lent another Rs 60 crore to MFIs.Should we credit the Government of Andhra Pradesh for bursting the MFI bubble? Has the lending reached many subprime borrowers? Prima-facie the evidence seems in favour of the government.Each poor family seems to have borrowed over Rs 30,000 per year. While every MFI claims that it has lent just Rs 10,000 per family, multiple lending suggests a higher figure.Most MFIs claim they have lent for income-generating activities. In reality, most lending has been for consumption purposes – buying a TV, repairing a house, paying for school-college fees or for serious illness of a family member.Thus, indiscriminate lending and irresponsible borrowing was encouraged, leading to the sub-prime bubble.
THE WAY OUTFirst, the sector has to be regulated by the state governments. They can, however, go overboard and stifle the sector. Politicians would be too happy to ask people not to repay their loans to banks. The Andhra ordinance expects MFIs to obtain approval to make tiny loans, which is impractical. Hence, regulation has to be tempered by a sensible institution like RBI.Second, the regulation should encourage bonding their members, with savings, self-help, education, and not just credit. Money has to be lent only when the economic viability of projects is well established. The capacity of a village or a cluster to support income-generating activities has to be worked out to cap MFI lending geographically.Third, the MFIs who give credit to crores of women groups don't employ women to the same extent. Most show just 3-4 per cent women employees. This percentage must go up drastically. A holistic scheme to help the poor has to include – health insurance, self-help, education, employment and finally credit. Many MFIs overturned this philosophy by concentrating just on credit.(The author, a former IT Secretary, Government of Karnataka, is founder of Brickwork Group.)
Courtesy: The Hindu
Showing posts with label MFIs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MFIs. Show all posts
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Microfinance, India's sub-prime crisis, Vivek Kulkarni
Labels:
Andhra Pradesh Microfinance Bill,
Loan-Sharks,
MFIs,
Micro credit,
micro loans,
SKS IPO,
sub-prime crisis,
suicides,
Vijay Mahajan; Basix,
Vikram Akula
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Backlash of Andhra Suicide spreads: Now Bangladesh Caps Micro-credit Interest rates
Dhaka-Micro-finance lending pioneer Bangladesh plans to cap the industry's interest rates amid criticism that for-profit groups are demanding excessive payments from poor borrowers, an official said Tuesday.
Muhammad Yunus, who created the microfinance concept and built up specialist lender Grameen Bank, won a Nobel prize for his work but the sector has since grown into an unregulated, multi-billion-dollar commercial industry. The government's Micro-credit Regulatory Authority (MRA) has approved new rules banning microfinance lenders from charging more than 27 percent interest on loans, MRA director Sazzad Hossain said.
"Many micro-lenders have earned a bad name for charging high interest rates. There are also isolated incidents in which lenders have used force to compel borrowers to repay loans," Hossain told AFP. One out of every five of Bangladesh's 146 million citizens is a micro-credit borrower, relying on one of more than 1,200 micro-finance institutions whose interest rates vary from 20 percent to 51 percent, according to the MRA.
"We oppose the interest rate cap. It will be hard for micro-lenders to stay afloat charging just 27 percent interest," said Mosharraf Hossain, head of the Credit Development Forum, a microfinance industry association. Hossain said local microfinance institutions have high costs as many borrow money from private banks at around 13 percent interest, then lend the money on, adding that there are extra costs when operating in remote, rural areas. "We also write off huge amount of loans during natural disasters such as cyclones, floods," he said, warning that if the sector collapsed due to caps on interest rates, it would hit the poor hardest.
The MRA move comes after India's Andhra Pradesh state, the hub of Indian small loan activity, cracked down on micro-financiers following accusations that high interest rates and aggressive debt collectors had led to over 30 suicides. Bangladesh's new regulations, to come into force in July 2011, also ban unofficial deductions by lenders for so-called saving schemes, limit charges for administration fees and set a 15-day mandatory grace period for repayment.Courtesy Bangladesh-web.com
Courtesy Bangladesh-web.com
Labels:
Andhra Pradesh suicides,
Bangladesh,
Interest Cap,
MFIs,
Micro-finance,
micro-lending,
Mohammed Yunus,
Poverty,
SKS Microfinance,
Vikram Akula
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