Posts Tagged ‘center for financial inclusion’

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 2/17/2012

posted: 2012-02-17 @ 9:42 am EST

Obama’s SBA Budget: Doing Less With More

By Robb Mandelbaum, New York Times Microloan counseling would not fare as badly, but other programs that serve the most disadvantaged small businesses, like HubZones and outreach to Native …

Social entrepreneurs use startups to change the world

By VentureBeat With 50000 visitors to its website per day (higher than any other nonprofit with the exception of Wikipedia), Kiva is often cited as the premier success story in this space. Kiva’s President, Premel Shah, recently recognized as a young global leader by …

Who Needs to be Educated for Us to Achieve Financial Inclusion?

By Center for Financial Inclusion Maybe the first focus of financial education should not be at the client level. Maybe the appropriate starting point is for those of us employed by the microfinance industry to better understand our clients’ financial needs, capabilities, and aspirations.

Could Google Wallet be Google’s next failure?

By Marguerite Reardon, CNET (blog) On Friday, Google temporarily disabled the ability to set up new prepaid cards in its Google Wallet app after it was discovered that if someone lost his Google Wallet-enabled phone and the screen of the device wasn’t locked that someone finding the …

Starbucks’s Schultz to Expand Jobs Fund After Raising $2 Million

By Leslie Patton, Bloomberg Businessweek Josh Davis cofounder of Gelato Fiasco Inc in Brunswick Maine received a $140000 loan from Coastal Enterprises Inc through Create Jobs for USA to open a …

Kabbage Crunches UPS Shipping Data to Approve Small Business Loans

By Penny Crosman, American Banker “If you have a FICO score below 720, banks won’t look at you for a small business loan,” says Kathryn Petralia, co-founder and COO of Kabbage, a provider of working capital to small online merchants. “It’s horrible, perverted logic because small …

The Lessons of Microfinance History

By David Roodman, CGAP The chapter would tell stories, such as how Yunus came to devise his form of microcredit, how John Hatch came to village banking. And it would show statistics—how many borrowers and savers there are, in what countries they can be found.

Microfinance in Bangladesh: It’s Not What You Thought

By Elizabeth Rhyne, Huffington Post (blog) The model of microfinance in Bangladesh, as it originated at Grameen Bank, involved tiny loans to women with fixed terms and amounts, group liability, weekly meetings, forced payments into a group savings account, and a set of 16 social pledges chanted …

Hard Questions about Interest Rates: “What is a Fair Price to Pay for Good Credit” Session Take-aways

posted: 2010-05-23 @ 1:06 pm EDT

By Elisabeth Rhyne, “What is a Fair Price to Pay for Good Credit” panelist

Jonathan Lewis, founder of MicroCredit Enterprises, loves spirited dialogue, and that’s why as moderator of the panel on interest rates, he went for the jugular.   He knew that the hardest – and most sensational – questions to answer are: How much is too much? and Who changes too much?  I was interviewed by a reporter recently, who kept repeating this request: Give me a number. Give me a name. We like the concreteness of the numbers and the moral satisfaction of scolding price gougers.

Of course I didn’t want to give a name or a number, though I was surprised that two panelists did come up with upper bounds for the U.S. (Paul Leonard of the Center for Responsible Lending said 36 percent per FDIC limits, while Lynn Trojan of ACCION said that 50 percent would allow everyone to be reached sustainably).

But these questions take the dialogue in the wrong direction. They ask us to ignore the contextual factors that determine the right balance between client affordability and institutional sustainability, necessary to ensure that services remain available to all those who seek them. I am only prepared to call the price a lender charges responsible if I understand how large the loans are, what kind of cost structure the lender faces and how it uses its profits.

The best question of the day came from an audience member who asked, “Why is the price of money so emotionally charged when the price of other goods is not?” The answers to this question are very important to keep in mind as we work for consumer protection. First, loans bind people for the future. If they are not entered into carefully, they can harm clients who fall into debt traps.  People are often bad at betting on the future (as the panel on behavioral economics affirmed), and to exacerbate the situation, lenders enjoy a power imbalance over microfinance clients. Lenders must practice self-restraint, always hard, both for people and for businesses.  And the public tends to regard the costs of providing money in the form of a loans as negligible or somehow not fully legitimate.

Finally, as Paul pointed out, interest rates are not the whole story. It is important to examine the full range of terms and conditions that accompany a loan. The amount, the term and the fit to the client’s needs and ability to repay may all matter more to the client’s well-being than the interest rate.

Elisabeth Rhyne is Managing Director of the Center for Financial Inclusion (www.centerforfinancialinclusion.org) and a founder of The Smart Campaign (www.smartcampaign.org).

Painting the Impact Picture: Which Method is Best?

posted: 2010-05-10 @ 9:42 am EDT

By Elisabeth Rhyne, “Microfinance Miracle or Myth” panelist

At next week’s Microfinance USA conference, I have the honor of leading a session on one of the hottest topics in microfinance these days: impact. Interest in impact has surged recently because of the big press coverage garnered by the researchers associated with MIT’s Poverty Action Lab and their new randomized controlled trials. At the session we’ll talk about how these new studies work (in layman’s terms – I’m no econometrician) and what their results are showing about microfinance.

To start off, I’d like us to consider all the ways we can learn about the impact of microfinance. Like these:

  • The seeing-is-believing method – otherwise known as talking to clients or anecdotal evidence.
  • The market method – if customers pay for the services, they must value them.
  • The institutional method – sustainable institutions that serve the poor are prima facie contributions to more inclusive societies.
  • The anthropological approach – talking intensively to clients in a structured way that allows inferences to be drawn. Recently the Financial Diaries approach has done this.
  • The simple quantitative survey approach – used for years despite suffering from many design flaws.
  • And finally, the experimental design approach a statistically rigorous model patterned after medical drug trials, which is capturing today’s headlines.

I think we learn from all of these methods.  It’s like we are painting a picture using different kinds of paint and brushes.  Gradually, our picture takes on shape, color and texture, and ultimately all these elements come together to convey meaning.

At our session, I want to move beyond the often divisive arguments about which research method is better than others and look instead at the emerging painting, which is complex. The title of the session is Microfinance: Miracle or Myth.  Of course you can guess that my answer is, something else.

Elisabeth Rhyne is Managing Director of the Center for Financial Inclusion (www.centerforfinancialinclusion.org) and a founder of The Smart Campaign (www.smartcampaign.org).