Introduction
Increasing financial access to the poor and
the low income earners through sustainable financial services is one of the important
strategies that can effectively contribute to achieving the Millennium
Development Goals which is a statement of well-being for underprivileged
population in developing countries.
It is estimated that Microfinance Institutions
(MFIs) in Africa have over 44 million deposit accounts and 20 million loans
customers. Overall, there are 23, 000 MFIs doted across Sub Saharan Africa
(Mixmarket 2011). This is just to
establish the reason why current development programmes cannot afford to
exclude MFIs in developing and
implementing effective poverty reduction programmes.
MFI are "missioned" to create social and
economic impact as they create or increase financial participation for poor or
low income clients who are mostly outside the formal financial sector. In
summary, all MFIs strive to achieve threefold objectives which are; improving
social impact, increasing outreach and becoming financially sustainable.
Ghana has witnessed a sharp growth in the
establishment of microfinance institutions over the last decade. The MFI sector
has recorded increases in both borrowing and savings
clients. Overall, the sector can be described as a vibrant one which is
striving to improve financial services across the breath and length of the
country.
Inspite of the vibrancy characterized
by the increasing number of MFIs, deposits and loans there are many more
questions that must be answered to ensure that microfinance in Ghana is able to
contribute immensely to social and economic development of the targeted clients.
The microfinance sector in Ghana must, therefore, establish the following:
- · Who really are the clients of the MFIs?
- · Can the regional location of MFIs assist in reaching the poor?
- · Are the MFIs capable of contributing to reducing the poverty levels of their clients?
- · What issues are challenging the sustainability of the Microfinance operations in Ghana?
This article is not to provide answers but
will rather project some key observations or happenings within the microfinance
sector so as to establish some awareness and further initiate discussions among
players and stakeholders within the microfinance sector.
Considering the overall objective of
microfinance and the intent to help contribute to national development by
creating positive impact through the delivery of financial and non-financial services,
there is the need for all stakeholders to review the happenings within the microfinance
sector in Ghana. An appropriate review will enable stakeholders develop appropriate
strategies or policies that can help the sector to become relevant beyond just
becoming sustainable. The point is that MFIs can become very sustainable and
yet not be able impact the livelihoods of its clients. MFIs
are important actors in the financial sector and it is important for industry
analysts to understand how the sector is evolving.
Location of MFIs in Ghana
Poverty levels across the 10 regions
of Ghana are not the same. Aside the poverty levels, the population of poor
people are also not the same across the regions. Some regions of Ghana have
more population of poor people then others. The levels of poverty (incidence of
poverty) are high for some regions compared with others. For example the poverty incidence ranking by
regions (2006) indicated that Greater Accra Region ranked 1st with
upper West Region ranking 10th.
MFIs are classically established to target
poor people. If that assertion is right then it stands to reason that more MFIs
should be located in regions or areas that are characterized by high population
of poor people. This can best be illustrated by using the global picture that
shows that there are more MFIs in Africa compared with MFIs in Europe. This is
so because there are more poor people in Africa than in Europe.
In the case of Ghana, however, the
numbers of MFIs in regions with high poor population are less than the numbers
of MFIs that are operating in regions with less poor population. The situation is that, regions that are
characterized by high economic activities have more MFIs operating in such
markets. This is evidenced by the number
of MFIs operating currently in Greater Accra region compared with all the other
regions irrespective of the population of poor people that can be found in a
particular region.
The situation where more MFIs are
located in highly economic areas can be attributed to many factors including
entry barriers (capital requirement) that has been set for establishing MFIs in
Ghana. This requirement are established in a way to reduce the number of new
MFIs and further manager any other associated risk. Owners of MFIs prefer to
locate their MFIs in highly economic active markets so as to ensure higher
return on their investments.
It is important for stakeholders in
the microfinance industry to determine whether MFIs in Ghana are serving the
right market in order to be able to contribute to helping to reduce poverty
levels in their operational areas. By the location pattern of the MFIs it can
be that MFIs may not be directly operating in the markets where they are needed
most. If that is the case than the role of MFIs in contributing to improving financial access to the poor and the
low income earners who by their nature are more located in the rural areas or
less developed areas of the country many not be realized.
Client Targeting by MFIs
Traditionally microfinance
programmes target people who largely classified as poor. These categories of
people are defined based on their cost of consumption or living. Poor people
are defined by the World Bank as people who live on less than USD 2 per a day. Typical microfinance clients are
low-income persons who do not have access to formal financial institutions.
They are typically self-employed and often micro entrepreneurs. In rural areas,
they are usually smallholder farmers and others who are engaged in small
income-generating activities such as food processing and petty trade. In urban
areas, microfinance activities are more diverse and include shopkeepers,
service providers, artisans, street vendors, etc. Microfinance clients are poor
and vulnerable non-poor who have a relatively unstable source of income. The net worth of
these clients, therefore, in most cases cannot support them to borrow in large
amounts
Analyzing the type of clientele of most MFIs
in Ghana, it seems to suggest that most MFIs are targeting clients that have
different characteristics from the classical poor definition (USD 2.0 per day).
Most of these clients have secured employment and work in the formal sector
with consistent or reliable cash flows. Their salaries are guaranteed and majority
of the new microfinance clients can provide the needed collateral requested by
the MFIs.
Comparing the profile of the microfinance
clients that majority of the MFIs are targeting, we can find a contradiction between
the “acceptable microfinance clients” and what currently is happening in the
Ghanaian microfinance industry. The profiles of the microfinance clients in
Ghana include clients in formal employment majority of whom may be able to access
loans from traditional banks.
These observations, therefore, leads to the
next question; are MFIs in Ghana really targeting the poor who are outside the
banking systems? The importance of right
targeting is only to ensure that MFIs are on course in contributing to reducing
poverty .MFIs are to participate
directly at the bottom of the economic pyramid because that is where the poor
people can be found.
In microfinance targeting it’s important to
note that outreach in microfinance is not only about the number of people the
MFI is reaching with its product and service but it is defined by other factors
including the depth of outreach which basically
answers the question how poor are the clients being targeted.
Regulation
of MFIs.
Regulation has many advantages to microfinance
development. However, the manner in which microfinance institutions are
regulated can affect the social objective of microfinance. In the case of
Ghana, the regulation of MFIs does not encourage
MFI to keep focus on achieving their social objectives. The current microfinance regulation
requirements in Ghana is more tailored towards the financial sustainability of the
microfinance industry. The approach, therefore, tends to only address one
aspect of the 3 fold objectives of microfinance.
The social objective
of MFIs are the strong elements that
informs whether microfinance can achieve
the necessary impact on their clients and without necessary having to think
only in commercial terms. It is important to note that credits or loans in
itself does not directly lead to better nutrition or improvement in financial
literacy. However, it is the training received by microfinance client that is
mostly provided by the MFIs which builds the capacity of the clients and better
enable them to make important choices including how to better manage the credit
they receive. The non-financial assistance in the form of training also further
enables the clients to appreciate the reason for quality nutrition for their
households. Regulation, therefore, must encourage the inclusion of other
non-financial details in the monthly reports by MFIs to their Apex bodies.
There must also be a way to ensure that reports being made to various Apexes
including the Central Bank does not compete with the core activities of the
MFIs. This is with the backdrop that MFIs activities are already expensive and,
therefore, designating one key staff only for the purposes of completing
returns can add up to the already expensive cost and further squeeze social
objective out of the overall equation.
Conclusion
Microfinance programmes have a purpose to contribute to poverty reduction and MFIs are the vehicle which drives sustainable microfinance programmes. There is the need to constantly review the entire microfinance sector in Ghana to ensure its effectiveness. This can only be achieved through a proper balancing of outreach, social impact and sustainability. The microfinance industry may miss the objective of contributing to poverty reduction if the key issues regarding location of MFIs, clients targeting and regulation are not critically reviewed. MFIs in Ghana must operat directly in places where the poor can be located. Their products and services must be designed to target the financially excluded. It is only through this that the objective of ensuring that MFIs become relevant towards poverty reduction and economic development at the micro level can be achieved.
Microfinance programmes have a purpose to contribute to poverty reduction and MFIs are the vehicle which drives sustainable microfinance programmes. There is the need to constantly review the entire microfinance sector in Ghana to ensure its effectiveness. This can only be achieved through a proper balancing of outreach, social impact and sustainability. The microfinance industry may miss the objective of contributing to poverty reduction if the key issues regarding location of MFIs, clients targeting and regulation are not critically reviewed. MFIs in Ghana must operat directly in places where the poor can be located. Their products and services must be designed to target the financially excluded. It is only through this that the objective of ensuring that MFIs become relevant towards poverty reduction and economic development at the micro level can be achieved.