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REVIEW OF MICROFINANCE ARTICLE By Anil Kumar Sahu (B. Sc. Ag. & M. Sc. ICT-ARD) 1. Is micr odeb t good for poo r peopl e? A not on the dark side of microfin anc e By David Hulme  Most MFIs are involved in disbursing loans and their savings services are designed as a means of collateralizing loans and providing low-cost capital; they are not designed to meet the Poor’s need for savings mechanisms. Such types of loans are usually come under ‘micro credit ’ and MFIs have created the myth that poor people always manage to repay the ir loa ns bec ause of the ir abi li ty to expl oit bus ine ss opportu nit ies . Thi s is nonsense and Von Pischke’s dictum that we should call microcredit’ microdebt’ can help us be more realistic about the different ways in which loans can impact on the livelihoods of the poor people. Microdebt has great potential and opportunities for the poor people to utilize the funds of money to uplift the income, increase the soci o- economic st at us and reduce the vulnerability. But not all microdebt produces favorable outcome, particularly poor people who are lo w income in saturated ma rk et that are poor ly developed and where environmental and economic shocks are common like drought, flood, sickness, etc. There are lacking in skills and knowledge of poor people and they are not able to take decision either bad or good and a proportion of poor borrowers encounter great difficulties in repaying loans. MFIs have a solution for that and they can overcome with ‘social support’ in some  painless way, this is often not the case –talk to the drop-outs of MFIs! In Bangladesh, MFI debtors have been arrested by the police, are threatened with physical violence (Montgome ry, 1996 ) and the pre ss regula rly report female suicides res ulting fro m  problems of repaying loans. Many poor people are very frightened about getting into debt; this is a rational response to the danger that arises from indebtedness to MFIs and not a ‘Misunderstanding’.

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REVIEW OF MICROFINANCE ARTICLE

By Anil Kumar Sahu (B. Sc. Ag. & M. Sc. ICT-ARD)

1. Is microdebt good for poor people? A not on the dark side of microfinance

By David Hulme

 

Most MFIs are involved in disbursing loans and their savings services are designed as a

means of collateralizing loans and providing low-cost capital; they are not designed to

meet the Poor’s need for savings mechanisms. Such types of loans are usually come

under ‘microcredit’ and MFIs have created the myth that poor people always manage to

repay their loans because of their ability to exploit business opportunities. This is

nonsense and Von Pischke’s dictum that we should call microcredit’ microdebt’ can help

us be more realistic about the different ways in which loans can impact on the livelihoods

of the poor people.

Microdebt has great potential and opportunities for the poor people to utilize the funds of 

money to uplift the income, increase the socio-economic status and reduce the

vulnerability. But not all microdebt produces favorable outcome, particularly poor people

who are low income in saturated market that are poorly developed and whereenvironmental and economic shocks are common like drought, flood, sickness, etc. There

are lacking in skills and knowledge of poor people and they are not able to take decision

either bad or good and a proportion of poor borrowers encounter great difficulties in

repaying loans.

MFIs have a solution for that and they can overcome with ‘social support’ in some

 painless way, this is often not the case –talk to the drop-outs of MFIs! In Bangladesh,

MFI debtors have been arrested by the police, are threatened with physical violence

(Montgomery, 1996) and the press regularly report female suicides resulting from

 problems of repaying loans. Many poor people are very frightened about getting into

debt; this is a rational response to the danger that arises from indebtedness to MFIs and

not a ‘Misunderstanding’.

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Microenterprise lending like school fee, cope with medical shocks and vulnerability

(Rutherford, 2000) has become a mile stone in the evolution of MFIs as an industry and

they provided service to poor people who match with client needs. Some of the countries

like Kenya where there is women’s finance trust who wishes to make saving and some

how found that the saving account is greater than the loans account, but the microfinance

industries tries to force every saver4 also to be a borrower. The viability of Microfinance

industry depends on the loans portfolio while savings products are not designed to cover 

costs.

The effective MFIs such as Grameen Bank n Bangladesh who provide services that help

 poor people to improve his prospects and quality of life and reduce their vulnerability.

However, the claims that microfinance assists ‘the poorest ‘and the poorest of the poor’

are unfounded within national contexts. MFIs virtually never work with poorest who are

mentally and physically disabled, the elderly children, the destitute and refugees and

many MFIs (like in Kenya and Uganda) have high proportions of clients who are non-

 poor, if one takes official national levels of the poverty line as the criteria. There is a

common assumption about microfinance that they are working with the poor and poorest

 people needs to be dropped, unless MFIs can provide clear evidence that this is the case.

MFI and donors has been created impression that microfinance is a cure for poverty. This

is a potentially dangerous statement as it distracts attention from the fact that poverty

reduction requires action on many fronts: social safety nets for the poorest and most

vulnerable, an effective education system, and low-cost and reliable health services,

governments that can provide social inclusion and sound macroeconomics policies, and

many other issues.

Providing effective microfinance services to poor people is part of a poverty-reduction

strategy, but only a part. Those who present microfinance as a magic bullet to reduce

 poverty provide such a simple message for policy formulation that they encourage it to be

simple-minded.

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Understanding of poverty reduction will be illustrating the feasibility of creating MFIs

that can approach sustainability and provide valued financial services to poor people.

Microfinance promotes group-based microenterprise loan products and is obstructing the

development of the full range of services and products that poor people wan and need:

flexible savings, contractual savings, loans for education and health, microinsurance and

lines of credit.

In 1990s have been regarded as ‘Decade of Microcredit Complacency’. It is time to

stocktake, to stop recycling myths, to stop copying the initial breakthrough products and

to focus on the real job in hand: developing institutions that can create and provide the

 broad range of microfinancial services that will support poor people in their efforts to

improve their own and their children’s prospects

1.1 Review 

 

What Halme had told in article is 100 per cent relevant. Actually MFIs which is working

in independently without government regulations they are instead of helping the poor 

they exploiting them. MFI charging more interest rate they are not giving flexibility in

loan means the poor can not be diverted the loan in the areas there urgent need like

medicine, food in drought period. The second problems with poor are they do not have

facility to save their daily small amount. Instead of taking credit saving is more important

with poor downtrodden people and because of these they either spend this money in some

good ways or spent it in bad vices, so until and unless poor will support with shocks,

seasonality, and provided loan at very cheap rate they can not come out of vicious cycle

of life.

2. Microfinance and farmers: Do they fit? By Malcon Harper

 

‘ New paradigm’ of microfinance has been replaced the concept of old style rural finance

which mainly subsidized low-cost farm credit. The ‘old paradigm’ rural development

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financial institutions have often disappeared, and others have been converted into what is

effectively specialist microfinance MFIs.

Farming is defined as the cultivation of crops, and animal husbandry of any kind is

excluded. Uses of microfinance in ‘new paradigm’ are not limited to animal husbandry

 but also for crop cultivation. The communities-owned village banks and cooperatives

constrained by their lack of funds (Klein, 1999) and few NGO MFIs are engaged in crop

lending (Coffey, 1998).

MFIs who financed for crop cultivation like Basix in India, have poor experience with

this kind of loan (DiLeo, 2003) There are fundamental difference between farming and

other income generating activities, which may affect the match between microfinance and

the farmers needs. These include the following:-

• Most farming products are themselves a means of survival. They can be eaten

as well as sold.

• Farming tends to be an ancestral activity. Most small scale farmers are

following their parents’ footsteps and farming it is not new to them.

• Many (but not all) farmers already own the basic asset required for farming,

which is land. They do not have to finance its acquisition.

• Land is traditionally the most acceptable form of collateral, as well as being

 basic to farming.

• Farming land, unlike most other assets, usually increase in value in the long

term, but in the short term it declines in value if it is not used. Its value can

also be reduced through overuse or misuse, but if I am used at all the owner 

must usually invest heavily in bringing it back in to production. This does not

apply to land used in shifting cultivation, but this type of land use is not the

dominated method in most regions.

• Most farming families live on the land that cultivate; it provides space for 

shelter as well as for cultivation.

Typical uses of microfinance are:

• Consumption credit for medical care in case of sickness;

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MFIs should set their prices not only by calculating what their cost are, but by assessing

what their customers can afford to pay. The competition is still usually the moneylender,

whose rates have often come down in recent years, in part because of competition from

MFIs, but moneylender interest rates are still well above most MFI rates.

Rates of return generally decrease as the scale of investment increases. A rickshaw puller 

can earn a higher percentage return on his investment in the rickshaw than a taxi driver 

can earn on his car, and a tailor can earn a larger proportionate return on the cost of her 

treadle powered sewing machine than an investor can make on her investment in a

garment factory. Similarly, if it is possible to compare the returns on farm and non-farm

investments of similar scale. If investments in farming yield a generally lower return than

investments of similar amounts in what has come to be know as ‘the non-farm sector’,

then may be one explanation for the fact that most microcredit is used for consumption or 

for non farm activities.

Indian cases predominate, but this may not be unreasonable in the light of the fact that

some 700 million Indians live and work in rural areas, of which most are very poor by

any standards. This article has only dealt only with interest rates and rate of return; issue

such as cash flow, risk or gender have not been covered. A number of microfinance

institutions such as Basix Finance are also pioneering new forms of protection against

crop failure in order to reduce the risk of non-repayment.

There have a number of innovations in farming system and technologies, such as the

irrigation treadle pump, pioneering in Bangladesh and India, and lower risk crops,

integrated pest management using less imputes, and new technologies that are under the

control of women. Some of these increase rates of return while others reduce the amounts

needed for investment.

MFIs need to be more efficient and reduce their costs. The pressure to date has been for 

MFIs to achieve ‘sustainability’. For a finance services business, this presumably means

 profitability, include some return on equi8ty. MFIs have only reached 10 per cent or less

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of the potential microfinance market in most countries, and moneylenders and other 

informal credit supplier are still their main competition.

2.1 Review 

Microfinance and farmers, definitely fit each other. According to Harper the new concept

of microfinance have the revolutionized the rural world. Previously microcredit was

given by credit institution, cooperatives and moneylender. Lot of non farm activity has

 been kept as financial exclusion. So in current scenario the NGOMFIs have brought all

these unorganized non farm activity like animal husbandry, embroidery tellering, cottage

industry, basket weaning etc. into financial inclusion.

3. Microfinance: Some conceptual and methodological problems by David Ellerman

Microfinance has grown into a major ‘development solution’. And now the success story

has been crowned with the Nobel peace Prize for Muhammad Yunus and Grameen Bank.

Yet microfinance is not without controversy Microfinance might be useful compared to a

more recent development fad, social funds, which also got quick gratifying results. A

loan made to a poor country to establish a social fund at the national level that will then

make a gift for local infrastructure to qualifying jurisdictions. Microfinance has even

more endearing characteristics than social funds, and thus the appeal of microfinance has

certainly been more enduring. It is a programme that targets the poor and seems to

 provide a certain measure of poverty alleviation. It seems to be associated with enabling

entrepreneurships and business development so that poor people can then provide for 

themselves. Commercial sustainability is the mother of all development fads and, thus, it

is an appropriate topic for some critical examination.

Genuine development assistance, where the helpers do not crowd out and undercut the

agency of the doers, is a slow, subtle and painstaking process. The political leaders and

the donors to ‘do more’ to help the poor and to ‘do it quickly’ because thing are getting

worse. The activity of microfinance organizations are described as funding

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‘entrepreneurship’ by the poor when the bulk of loan seem to fall into the category that is

 better described as consumption smoothing.

It is now common place that donations of food surpluses from the north to ‘feed the poor’

in the south may well end up-in spite of the superficial appeal to ‘helping the poor’ – 

undercutting the struggling farmers in the south so that the south becomes even less able

to feed itself. Microfinance programme may be like fast-growing weeds that will choke

the ground before the slower 9’development-oriented’) crops can grow.

Thus the rush to do good with pre-packaged and easily-installed microfinance

 programme may well be another form of unhelpful that has untoward longer-term effects

on the supposed beneficiaries. In this sense, microfinance may be and anti-development

intervention.

Evaluation is a part of the learning process has been taken to whole new level-impact

evaluations. Impact evaluation have become a fad in their own right and are now

entwined with microfinance as a means to help sustain porgrammes that have little if any

development effectiveness.

Evaluation is something only determined by considering its costs, which entails

comparing it to alternatives. One of the basic concepts in economics is the notion of 

opportunity cost. A genuine evaluation should be seen as an integral part of the process of 

social learning.

The general evaluation design is a matched comparison between social fund communities

or beneficiaries and others with similar characteristics that did not implement a social

fund project (Social Protection Unit, 2000). The World Bank uses evaluations to evaluate

not just its social fund projects but also its microfinance programme. World Bank 

Development Economics Department has launched a major initiative to promote impact

evaluations themselves as the ultimate low-hurdle way to evaluate development

 prgrammes.

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The World Bank often tries to legitimate its leading role by citing its unique standpoint to

scan the whole world for alternatives and to ascertain; best practices’. Yet after decades

of failure, it has decided that the best way to evaluate its development programmes is not

to compare them to all the actual alternatives that might be undertaken with the same

considerable resources but to compare them to ‘a hypothetical situation that would occur 

in the absence of the program’.

3.1 Review 

A development fad has to show the growth with sustainability means no damage or 

harmful effect on our future generation. Microfinance may development fads for the poor 

 people and there should no intervention of local ruling group. Microfinance should be

dependent on the basic needs of the poor people rather that MFIs need. Ellerman focuses

on the social fund that can be utilized for better education, health care, water supply but

they do not discuss about non material aspect of poor people. They are discussing about

the physical aspect of life so we can not tell that poor people will have the well being of 

life or people have developed quality of life without considering the non material aspect

of poor people that means we have to consider the inner aspect of life of poor people. So

there should be multiple aspects or multiple dimension approach for better life of poor 

  people. I agreed the concept of Ellerman about the entrepreneurship and business

development that is very innovative for poor people so that they can established own

enterprise for alleviating the poverty of poor people and it leads to sustainable

development of poor people. Economic development is also a major tool to relief the

 poverty. I favor the concept of ‘humanitarian relief’ either natural or human disaster.

Ellerman emphasized of the entrepreneurial knowledge, skill, opportunities to start

 business if they have facility of finance and under the guidance of MFIs and regular 

monitoring of business so there will lesser chance of risk. I agreed with Ellerman that

only sustainability is not an issue but an issue as to whether or not that sort of 

development assistance should be sustained. There is requirement of the building

capacity to the poor people.

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There is some concept in the mind of people or MFIs that MFIs are helping the poor but

instead of reality helping the poor to become the agents or doers of their own

development. Ellerman emphasized on the cooperative but cooperative are very biased to

rich, well being person and politicians and very less interference of poor people. So there

should be a cooperative like structure (SHGs) and all member should come under same

economic status and homogenous in nature. Microfinance organization should finance

 bulk funds for poor who want to establish small enterprise so that do not captured by

moneylender and enterprise should be in group rather than individually.

According to Ellerman microfinance acts as a weed because it grows very fast like

weeds. He told about the different types of evaluation like ‘impact evaluation, positive

evaluation, and test analysis for any organization that will give better result for proper 

functioning of any organization. They also emphasize on the training the poor people that

will develop the skill to empower his/her self. Microfinance organization is based on the

opportunity cost that means alternatives over the best possible solutions.