Stanford Social Innovation Review

Stanford Social Innovation Review is an award-winning magazine covering best strategies for nonprofits, foundations, and socially responsible businesses. Published quarterly by the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Subscriber Login



Auto-login on future visits

Forgot your password?
Obtain a login

More

Microfinance Misses Its Mark

Despite the hoopla over microfinance, it doesn’t cure poverty. But stable jobs do. If societies are serious about helping the poorest of the poor, they should stop investing in microfinance and start supporting large, labor-intensive industries. At the same time, governments must hold up their end of the deal, for market-based solutions will never be enough

By Aneel Karnani
 Summer 2007   22 comments | Comment on this article

Microcredit is the newest silver bullet for alleviating poverty. Wealthy philanthropists such as financier George Soros and eBay co-founder Pierre Omidyar are pledging hundreds of millions of dollars to the microcredit movement. Global commercial banks, such as Citigroup Inc. and Deutsche Bank AG, are establishing microfinance funds. Even people with just a few dollars to spare are going to microcredit Web sites and, with a click of the mouse, lending money to rice farmers in Ecuador and auto mechanics in Togo.

Wealthy philanthropists, banks, and online donors aren’t the only ones fascinated with microcredit. The United Nations designated 2005 as the International Year of Microcredit, explaining on its Web site that microentrepreneurs can use their small loans to “grow thriving business and, in turn, provide for their families, leading to strong and flourishing local economies.” The Nobel Committee awarded the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize to Muhammad Yunus and Grameen Bank, declaring that microcredit is “an ever more important instrument in the fight against poverty.”

All this enthusiasm for microcredit has attracted untold billions of dollars.1 Grameen Bank alone disbursed $4 billion in microloans over the last 10 years, and it now has 7 million borrowers in Bangladesh. In India, about 1,000 microcredit organizations and 300 commercial banks lent $1.3 billion to 17.5 million people in 2006, says Sanjay Sinha, managing director of Micro-Credit Ratings International in India.2 Worldwide, 3,133 microcredit institutions provided loans to 113.3 million clients, finds the State of the Microcredit Summit Campaign Report 2006.3

This fervor suggests that microcredit really must help the poor. And many have made grand claims to this effect, including Yunus, who said, “We will make Bangladesh free from poverty by 2030.”4 Somewhat less ambitiously, the State of the Microcredit Summit Campaign Report 2006 states that “microcredit is one of the most powerful tools to address global poverty.”

Yet my analysis of the macroeconomic data suggests that although microcredit yields some noneconomic benefits, it does not significantly alleviate poverty. Indeed, in some instances microcredit makes life at the bottom of the pyramid worse. Contrary to the hype about microcredit, the best way to eradicate poverty is to create jobs and to increase worker productivity.

To understand why creating jobs, not offering microcredit, is the better solution to alleviating poverty, consider these two alternative scenarios: (1) A microfinancier lends $200 to each of 500 women so that each can buy a sewing machine and set up her own sewing microenterprise, or (2) a traditional financier lends $100,000 to one savvy entrepreneur and helps her set up a garment manufacturing business that employs 500 people. In the first case, the women must make enough money to pay off their usually high-interest loans while competing with each other in exactly the same market niche. Meanwhile the garment manufacturing business can exploit economies of scale and use modern manufacturing processes and organizational techniques to enrich not only its owners, but also its workers.

As these scenarios illustrate, a surer way to ending poverty is to create jobs and to increase worker productivity, rather than investing in microfinance. But before going into detail about why it is better for an underdeveloped country to promote large enterprises, not microenterprises, let’s examine the theory behind microcredit.

Microcredit 101

The microfinance movement addresses a basic yet devastating glitch in the formal banking system: Poor households cannot get capital from traditional banks because they do not have collateral to secure loans, and traditional banks do not want to take on the risks and costs of making small, uncollateralized loans. Without this capital, impoverished people cannot rise above subsistence. For example, a seamstress cannot buy the sewing machine that would allow her to sew more clothes than she could by hand, and thereby pull herself out of poverty.

Microfinanciers use innovative contractual practices and organizational forms to reduce the risks and costs of making loans, such as lending to groups, rather than just to one person. Some microcredit organizations give their clients more than loans, offering education, training, healthcare, and other social services. Typically, these organizations are not-for-profit or are owned by customers or investors who are more concerned about the economic and social development of the poor than they are with profits. The largest of these social purpose microfinanciers include Opportunity International, Finca International, Accion International, Oikocredit, and Grameen Bank.

In contrast to nonprofit organizations, commercial banks that make microloans typically provide only financial services. Indonesia’s Bank Rakyat, Ecuador’s Bank Pichincha, and Brazil’s Unibanco all directly target poor customers. Some large commercial banks, such as the Indian bank ICICI, do not lend directly to individual microcredit clients, but instead work through small microfinance organizations.

Another innovation that many nonprofit microfinance organizations have adopted is targeting women. At Grameen Bank, for example, 97 percent of clients are women because “women have longer vision [and] want to change their lives much more intensively,” says Yunus.5 On the other hand, “men are more callous with money.”6 Evidence indeed suggests that when women retain control of microloans, they spend more on the health, security, and welfare of their families.7

A major selling point of microfinance is its alleged ability to empower women. Research shows that microcredit increases women’s bargaining power within the home, centrality to the community, awareness of social and political issues, and mobility. It also increases their self-esteem and self-worth.8 Yet microcredit alone cannot overcome ingrained patriarchal systems of control. In spite of having access to credit, some female microcredit clients do not have control over the loans contracted or the income generated by the microenterprises.9 Overall, microcredit does empower women, but only in noneconomic ways.

Failures of Microfinance

Despite the hoopla surrounding microcredit, few have studied its impact.10 One of the most comprehensive studies reaches a surprising conclusion: Microloans are more beneficial to borrowers living above the poverty line than to borrowers living below the poverty line.11 This is because clients with more income are willing to take the risks, such as investing in new technologies, that will most likely increase income flows. Poor borrowers, on the other hand, tend to take out conservative loans that protect their subsistence, and rarely invest in new technology, fixed capital, or the hiring of labor.

Microloans sometimes even reduce cash flow to the poorest of the poor, observes Vijay Mahajan, the chief executive of Basix, an Indian rural finance institution. He concludes that microcredit “seems to do more harm than good to the poorest.”12 One reason could be the high interest rates charged by microcredit organizations. Acleda, a Cambodian commercial bank specializing in microcredit, charges interest rates of about 2 percent to 4.5 percent each month. Some other microlenders charge more, pushing most annual rates to between 30 percent and 60 percent.13 Microcredit proponents argue that these rates, although high, are still well below those charged by informal moneylenders. But if poor clients cannot earn a greater return on their investment than the interest they must pay, they will become poorer as a result of microcredit, not wealthier.

Another problem with microcredit is the businesses it is intended to fund. A microcredit client is an entrepreneur in the literal sense: She raises the capital, manages the business, and takes home the earnings. But the “entrepreneurs” who have become heroes in the developed world are usually visionaries who convert new ideas into successful business models. Although some microcredit clients have created visionary businesses, the vast majority are caught in subsistence activities. They usually have no specialized skills, and so must compete with all the other self-employed poor people in entry-level trades.14 Most have no paid staff, own few assets, and operate at too small a scale to achieve efficiencies, and so make very meager earnings. In other words, most microenterprises are small and many fail – contrary to the United Nations’ hype that microentrepreneurs will grow thriving businesses that lead to flourishing economies.

This should not be too surprising. Most people do not have the skills, vision, creativity, and persistence to be entrepreneurial. Even in developed countries with high levels of education and access to financial services, about 90 percent of the labor force is employees, not entrepreneurs.15

The reality of microcredit is less attractive than the promise.16 Even a stalwart proponent of neoliberal policies like The Economist is beginning to conclude that “the few studies that have been done suggest that small loans are beneficial, but not dramatically so.”17

Jobs, Not Microcredit

Microcredit is certainly a noble idea and a genuine innovation that has provided some positive impact to its clients, particularly to women’s noneconomic empowerment. It also helps the poor during cyclical or unexpected crises, and thus reduces their vulnerability.18 But the critical issue is whether microcredit helps eradicate poverty. And on that front, it falls short.

China, Vietnam, and South Korea have significantly reduced poverty in recent years with little microfinance activity. On the other hand, Bangladesh, Bolivia, and Indonesia haven’t been as successful at reducing poverty despite the influx of microcredit.

The fact is, most microcredit clients are not microentrepreneurs by choice. They would gladly take a factory job at reasonable wages if it were available. We should not romanticize the idea of the “poor as entrepreneurs.” The International Labour Organization (ILO) uses a more appropriate term for these people: “own-account workers.”

Creating opportunities for steady employment at reasonable wages is the best way to take people out of poverty. “Nothing is more fundamental to poverty reduction than employment,” states the ILO. And the United Nations Development Programme agrees: “Employment is a key link between economic growth and poverty reduction. Productive and remunerative employment can help ensure that poor people share in the benefits of economic growth.”

Consider the patterns of poverty and employment over time in China, India, and Africa, whose populations make up about three-quarters of the world’s poor (see graphs on p. 39). Each region has pursued a different path to economic development, and the results so far have been markedly different.

In China, a large and growing percentage of the population is employed in a job. At the same time, the percentage of people living in poverty has declined significantly in recent decades. In Africa, a small and shrinking fraction of the population is employed, and the incidence of poverty has remained unchanged during the same period. India’s performance lies somewhere between the two: The number of people in jobs has grown some, and the number of people in poverty has shrunk a little.

Many people who have jobs in these regions are still stuck below the poverty line – the working poor. Whether an employee is “poor” depends on her wages, the size of her household, and the income of other household members. Increased productivity leads to higher wages, which in turn lead to employees earning enough to rise above poverty. That is why it is not enough to create jobs; regions must also increase labor productivity through the use of new technology, management techniques, specialization, and the like.

When it comes to increasing labor productivity, India’s performance is mediocre and the situation in Africa is dismal. One reason for India’s poor productivity growth is that its enterprises are often too small. The average firm size in India is less than one-tenth the size of comparable firms in other emerging economies.19 The emphasis on microcredit and the creation of microenterprises will only make this problem worse.20

It is possible for an economy to invest in both microenterprises and larger enterprises. But governments need to prioritize development approaches that have a higher payoff. As Amar Bhide and Carl Schramm wrote in The Wall Street Journal: “Governments in fragile states have only so much political capital and capacity. So it is crucial to proceed in a disciplined sequence.”21

The State’s Responsibilities

Poverty alleviation cannot be defined only in economic terms; it is also about addressing a much broader set of needs. Amartya Sen, the Nobel Prize-winning economist, eloquently argues that development can be seen as a “process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy.”22 Social, cultural, and political freedoms are desirable in and of themselves, and they also enable individual income growth. Services such as public safety, basic education, public health, and infrastructure nurture these freedoms and increase the productivity and employability of the poor, and thus their income and well-being.

The governments of all developing countries claim to accept responsibility for these functions. Yet they have failed dismally to deliver on their promises. Consider the case of India: The economy is growing rapidly, the stock market is at an all-time high, Indian companies are expanding abroad, and a large middle class is emerging. It is, for many, the best of times.

Contrast this image with that of another India, where 79 percent of the population still lives on less than $2 per day, 39 percent of adults are illiterate, 31 percent of rural households and 9 percent of urban households do not have safe drinking water, 81 percent of rural households and 19 percent of urban households do not have a toilet, 10 percent of boys and 25 percent of girls do not attend primary school, 49 percent of children are underweight, 9 percent of children die in the first five years of their lives, and 400,000 children die of diarrhea every year.

The boom in India’s private sector has been accompanied by an outright failure of the state, and the poor have borne the brunt of this failure. The rich can purchase services from private enterprises, and the middle class are the main beneficiaries of limited public services. But the poor have little or no access to public services and cannot pay the high prices for private services. For instance, children of the rich go to exclusive private schools, children of the middle class use a mix of private and public schools, and children of the poor often do not go to school at all or go to low-quality public schools.

Markets Aren’t Enough

India isn’t the only country whose government is failing to meet its responsibilities. Much of the developing world is likewise missing a vibrant public sector. In response to these shortcomings, a growing number of people believe that markets would do a better job of providing these same services. That is one of the reasons why microcredit has such widespread appeal: It’s a market-based approach to eliminating poverty.23

Even those who advocate a market-based approach to providing basic services don’t argue that the state can totally abdicate its responsibilities. The late economist Milton Friedman, who advocated a school voucher system, did not want the state to withdraw totally from the field of education. The state must provide basic education for the sake of intergenerational equity. The state must also be responsible for providing services when there is a market failure. Free markets do not work well when economies of scale are very large and there is a natural monopoly, as in the case of piped water, and when the commodity is a “common good,” as in the case of public health. In such cases, the market might be a partial complement to the state, but it cannot be a total substitute. For example, if a region has a private water supply, the government must still regulate rates and ensure that the poor have enough purchasing power to buy water.

The business guru C.K. Prahalad says, “If people have no sewage and drinking water, should we also deny them televisions and cell phones?”24 Writing about the slums of Mumbai, he argues that the poor accept that access to running water is not a “realistic option” and therefore spend their income on things that they can get now and that will improve the quality of their lives.25 This opens up a market, and he urges private companies to make significant profits by selling to the “bottom of the pyramid” (BOP).

Yet the BOP proposition glosses over the real issue: Why do poor people accept that they cannot expect running water? Even if they do accept this bleak view, why should we? Instead, we should emphasize the failure of government and attempt to correct it. Giving a voice to the poor is a central aspect of the development process.

The business community, bureaucrats, politicians, and the media are very busy congratulating themselves on the booming private sector in India. Sure, more Indians have cell phones. But what many remember about India is not all the people using cell phones. It’s all the people defecating in public because they do not have toilets. Even in Mumbai, the business capital of India, about 50 percent of the people defecate outside. The current celebration of private sector successes should be met, and perhaps chastened, with anger at the failure of the state to provide basic services.

Overall, governments, businesses, and civil society would be well advised to reallocate their resources and energies away from microfinance and into supporting larger enterprises in labor-intensive industries. This is what is alleviating poverty in China, Korea, Taiwan, and other developing countries. At the same time, they should also provide basic services that improve the employability and productivity of the poor. Otherwise, they will miss the mark of lifting people out of poverty.

1 Tom Easton, “Hidden Wealth of the Poor,” The Economist (Nov. 3, 2005).

2 Claire Cane Miller, “Microcredit: Why India Is Failing,” Forbes (Nov. 10, 2006).

3 Sam Daley-Harris, “State of the Microcredit Summit Campaign Report 2006.” Available at http://www.microcreditsummit.org/pubs/reports/socr/2006.htm.

4 “Bangladesh Will Send Poverty to Museum by 2030: Yunus,” Financial Express (Feb. 18, 2007).

5 George Negus, “Foreign Correspondent – Interview With Prof. Muhammad Yunus,” ABC Online (March 25, 1997).

6 Manfred Ertel and Padma Rao, “Women Are Better With Money,” Spiegel (Dec. 7, 2006).

7 Aminur Rahman, “Micro-credit Initiatives for Equitable and Sustainable Development: Who Pays?” World Development (1999); Naila Kabeer, “Money Can’t Buy Me Love? Re-evaluating Gender, Credit and Empowerment in Rural Bangladesh,” IDS Discussion Paper No. 363 (1998); Mark Pitt and Shahidur Khandker, “Household and Intrahousehold Impact of the Grameen Bank and Similar Credit Targeted Programs in Bangladesh” (Washington, D.C.: World Bank Publications, 1995).

8 Gita Sabharwal, “From the Margin to the Mainstream. Micro-Finance Programmes and Women’s Empowerment: The Bangladesh Experience,” University of Wales, Swansea (2000). Available at http://www.gdrc.org/icm/wind/geeta.pdf.

9 Jennefer Sebstad and Gregory Chen, “Overview of Studies on the Impact of Microenterprise Credit” (Washington, D.C.: USAID, 1996).

10 Aliya Khawari, “Microfinance: Does It Hold Its Promises?” Discussion Paper, Hamburg Institute of International Economics (2004).

11 David Hulme and Paul Mosley, Finance Against Poverty (London: Routledge, 1996).

12 Salil Tripathi, “Microcredit Won’t Make Poverty History,” Guardian Unlimited (Oct. 17, 2006).

13 Daniel Ten Kate and Van Rouen, “The Cycle of Debt – As Microcredit Institutions Grow, Some Question Their Effect on Poverty,” The Cambodia Daily (Feb. 21-22, 2004).

14 Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo, “The Economic Lives of the Poor,” Journal of Economic Perspectives (2006).

15 LABORSTA Internet database, available at http://laborsta.ilo.org , International Labour Organization.

16 Thomas W. Dichter, “Hype and Hope: The Worrisome State of the Microcredit Movement” (2006). Available at http://www.microfinancegateway.org/content/article/detail/31747.

17 “Macro credit,” The Economist (Oct. 21, 2006).

18 Jonathan Morduch, “Does Microfinance Really Help the Poor? New Evidence From Flagship Programs in Bangladesh,” Harvard Institute for International Development and Hoover Institution, Stanford University (1998). Available at http://www.wws.princeton.edu/~rpds/downloads/morduch_microfinance_poor.pdf.

19 Kalpana Kochhar et al., “India’s Pattern of Development: What Happened, What Follows?” Journal of Monetary Economics (2006).

20 Milford Bateman and David Ellerman, “Micro-Finance: Poverty Reduction Breakthrough or Neoliberal Dead-End?” Paper presented at UNDP Bosnia and Herzegovina and the BiH Economic Policy Planning Unit (EPPU), “Poverty Roundtable: Achieving MDG 1 (sustainable poverty reduction) in BiH” (June 16-17, 2005).

21 Amar Bhide and Carl Schramm, “Phelps’s Prize,” The Wall Street Journal (Jan. 29, 2007).

22 Amartya Sen, Development as Freedom (New York: Anchor Books, 2000).

23 Bateman and Ellerman.

24 “Selling to the Poor,” Time (April 17, 2005).

25 C.K. Prahalad and Allen Hammond, “Serving the World’s Poor Profitably,” Harvard Business Review (2002)


ANEEL KARNANI is an associate professor of strategy at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business. Karnani’s research focuses on competitive advantage, strategies for growth, global competition, and emerging economies. He works with several companies to design and deliver executive development programs, and he is also actively involved in consulting to businesses.

Comments

Chat Bubble Comment

Interesting thought. Surely both can persist and thrive serving different needs. Microfinance for small businesses and big money for big business - its all part of a larger economic ecosystem. Not everyone everywhere can and does operate on the same scale financially. Technology will enable the basic infrastructure for businesses both large and small. The larger technological revolution should create a higher degree of basic parity between people and businesses, businesses and economies in both a social and economic sense. Mom and pop may never IPO but do they need to?

Cheers
Eben

»» Posted by: Ebstar on June 4, 2007 02:45 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

The business of microfinance is to provide to the disenfranchised the opportunity to borrow, save, secure and transfer funds, i.e. the complete set of financial services, so that they cease to be disenfranchised. To single out microcredit and its after-effects as the sole representation of this business is wrong and a one-sided view. Unless and until the impact of other services kick in to the same extent, we have no grounds to doubt the hypothesis that financial inclusion will lead to greater chances of economic development of those who are poor and vulnerable. Its a fact that credit has taken precedence over savings, insurance and remittances. This is a result of the type of organisations that have so far offered these services (small-sized, low capital, mostly non-bank), government regulations (limiting, multi-layered, inappropriate and confused), infrastructure challenges and, above all, the fact that microfinance is practised as a “market-based solution” with a clear commercial sustainability objective. Businesses are bound to go after the lowest hanging fruits. But eventually other services would need to follow to complete the picture - and the same businesses will rush to provide them as and when the other factors listed above get addressed. As people concerned with the lopsided growth of credit in absence of other services, our efforts should be trained more on making way for other services to follow than to pull down the good work being done in the one and only area that seems to be reaching a scale that is material - credit. To say that other conditions like jobs, healthcare, water and sanitation, important as they are, need to be fulfilled first and then alone should financial services follow is to expect too much. Where have we seen government bodies providing these basic services working seamlessly or even remotely closely with businesses or civil society organisations to achieve common goals? I believe each has to do its part and propel the others to action through direct (lobbying) and indirect (demonstration effect) means.

»» Posted by: Mona Kachhwaha on June 7, 2007 05:47 AM

Chat Bubble Comment

Everybody in the microfinance (MF) debate is too one-sided.  The Yunuses (Grameen) of the world lead the cheers while the statists and ILO do their best to pooh-pooh their successes while, as in the case of the author of this piece, state that the opportunity cost is too high and we should go back big company lending to labor intensive industries.  Why not both?

Interestingly, at the time he was brutally murdered, Daniel Pearl (WSJ) had been in a long running dialogue with Yunus about the bad credit and slow loans that Grameen appeared to be both experiencing and underreporting.  Pearl was in the process of writing a series on the success and failure of MF.  Tragically his life was cut short before he could publish his findings.

One thing is clear about this SSRI piece:  The author does not appreciate the boon that occurs in the human heart when she or he becomes an owner, a property owner, yes, a capitalist.  I would like to take the author up on the challenge to compare the results over long periods of time of the 500-person company vs the 500 individual seamstresses.  The “fatal conceit” of the ILO-types and the World Bank and the IMF is that they think they know best what to do with other people’s money.  Their dismal results over the last 50 years are well documented.  Indeed, the World Bank was becoming irrelevant as an international provider of capital to 3rd world enterprise even as the latest scandal broke.

So, two cheers for microfinance.  But I await the rigorous research and performance measurement.
Best regards,
Tim Cranston

»» Posted by: Tim Cranston on June 7, 2007 03:15 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

Microfinance does make a difference for poor women entrepreneurs and small businesses.  I saw it with my own eyes.

This April, I had the serendipitous and amazing opportunity to visit and interview women in Peru as part of a microfinance visit with the board of directors of Pro Mujer.  What I found interesting is that when the poorest women receive basic business training (i.e. becoming aware of what they make per hour with their businesses) as well as engage in peer communications (i.e. developing self confidence) within their lending groups, they do become micro-entrepreneurs and are able to make better decisions with their loans as well as save money.  In some cases, there was real talent, the women blossomed as business people, and they grew their businesses into export markets, or focused on products that were differentiators (i.e. money makers in local terms).  They may be the poorest women, but once they have a taste of success… they are empowered and want more, like healthcare and education for their families.

I agree that there are many women who continue to do the same old thing, and I worry that they will not get out of the vicious cycle of poverty.  In that case, maybe they should go work for the more successful businesses!  Jobs can and should be created from those micro-financed businesses with the most potential for growth—that could be the objectives of the next phase for microfinance.  With just a little encouragement and training, women are making money, saving, and changing the status of the family.  Start with the women, reach the children, send even one kid to college, and eventually it changes life for the entire family and next generations to come.  I heard the poorest women in Peru express their hopes and wishes, and everywhere, the women are working for their children. 

I don’t know how microfinance will evolve or how effective it will be to eradicate poverty (that seems to be a BIG goal), but I do know that at least one at a time, there are lives that are impacted by microcredit and that it works because “empowered” women want more for themselves and their families.

»» Posted by: Melonie Brophy, MBA Class 1979 on June 15, 2007 04:33 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

I think this article helps illustrate some of the inherent flaws of the neo-liberal (libertarian/objectivist/neo-conservative) worldview.

While capitalism and “markets” certainly have their place, they aren ‘t the end-all, be-all to every problem. There is a very important role for governments and communities acting for the common good.

Trusting market forces and all people acting purely out of self-interest to solve our problems is always going to leave us wanting.

»» Posted by: C Rahe on June 21, 2007 01:27 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

What’s “the mark”? 

Could it be that Mr. Karnani is a victim of the hype of the over-enthusiastic cheerleaders of microfinance?  This may be reflected in his use of wide-ranging terms for defining the “mark” for microfinance.  He uses “alleviating poverty,” “lifting people out of poverty,” “curing poverty” and even “eradicating” poverty. Even though anecdotal evidence show that it’s possible to make big gains, the studies tend to show that the norm is more modest - alleviation.

Would, say, a 50% increase in “lift the poor out” of poverty? Probably not.

Would it “cure” or “eradicate” poverty Not likely. 

However, would it “alleviate” poverty?  Would the lives of those people significantly improve?  Most definitely. 

A 50% increase in income, even if it would be relatively small in absolute terms and tiny to our Western eyes, would likely mean that people eat better, enjoy better health, improve their housing, and/or have greater confidence and hope for the future.  It would also provide a catalytic boost towards additional improvement – perhaps even permanent graduation out of poverty. If this is the “mark,” not rapid, overnight “eradication of poverty,” then we feel that microfinance is indeed hitting it.

Peter Greer
President
HOPE International

»» Posted by: Peter Greer on June 26, 2007 02:37 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

Finally a sensible assessment of micro-credit. The two alternative scenarios painted by the author - woman buying her own sewing machine vs savvy entrepreneur setting up a garment manufacturing business that employs 500 people - illustrates the situation perfectly.
I have some experience of micro-credit in India. Most of the loans are for buying household goods, financing weddings and repaying loans taken from traditional moneylenders. Very few women used it for business because most of the women did not know how to start one.
Micro-credit assumes that there is an entrepreneur hiding inside every poor village woman and all it needs is some money to unlock that potential.
It also puts the burden solely on the woman to takes loans, repay them, educate and feed her family because it’s easier that way.
Would someone do an objective study of (1) what women actually do with these loans, (2) THEIR OPINION of what they would prefer - a job or a loan, and (3) what real impact these loans have made on their lives.

»» Posted by: E Alexander on June 27, 2007 10:32 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

The article neglects to mention that much of microfinance is not intended to create entrepreneurs, but lends money for farmers to increase their output (either crops or animals) and this does lift them out of extreme poverty.

The article also fails to examine that the main reason China has created jobs has been through massive itnernal migration: over 100 million people are temporary migrants.
The Chinese government actively also promotes rural to urbal migration as a long-term sustainable poverty reduction and growth solution. Another 300 million residents will move to urban areas in the next 15-20 years which is why there is such an energy crunch and environmental crisis in China… China may have reduced poverty massively but is has come at just a big a cost to its environment.

»» Posted by: Adam on July 2, 2007 11:05 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

The article fails to analyse that China’s economic growth depended on loans from State-owned banks that were given out without any due-concern.

Should all developing countries lend out money (in order to create jobs in factories or the construction industry) without expecting to get it back, in the hope that their governments will be be able to bale out their banks at a later date (since the banks have no hope of getting their loans paid back)?

»» Posted by: Adam on July 2, 2007 11:13 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

I agree with Adam (above) that many other issues are at play and would support E Alexander’s (also above) idea of an objective (and, I would hope, geographically broad) study of microfinance. 

My comments are these:
1. Self-employed workers are more likely to take care of themselves—if they notice that fertilizer or pesticide is making them sick, they’ll stop using it. Governments and NGOs are likely to hold large employers accountable for such damage to human health and environment, but that takes a while and, in the meantime, individuals suffer, thinking or knowing they have no choice but to follow directions from management.

2. Microfinance without education is dangerous. Farmers accepting microloans will buy what—fertilizer to pollute water? chainsaws to clear forests and animal habitat? pesticide and herbicide to poison themselves and their families? And if the pay-off isn’t greater than the interest rate, which is a bit of math that confuses a large number of both bankers and borrowers in the US apparently (cf. US subprime mortgages), then both the borrowers lose (dignity, credit, possibly collateral) and the investors and savings account holders of the MFIs lose (hard-earned money, trust in the financial system).

3. Farmers also need markets for their increased production.  And preferably not a market that further entrenches dangerous monoculture (that ruins soil, hurts nutrition, and increases susceptibility to pests and volatile global markets) ... though, I was told, if a farmer wants to sell to the World Food Programme, s/he must meet a large minimum amount requirement, all in one species of, say, corn.

4. The economies of scale that the author touts regarding large employers would seem to me to indicate that fewer people would be employed per unit output, though of course output (and consumption of resources) may increase. Given recent research (http://www.slate.com/id/2171898/) indicating that a diverse economy has better long-term prospects, would one not want to endure a little less efficiency in the short-term to preserve diversity in the marketplace?

To those of you who are more versed in economics and development than I, I would like to ask:
1. Is microlending a zero-sum game? If one entrepreneur wins, does that extra profit come out of the pockets of his erstwhile private lender or his non-microborrowing competitors? I imagine the answer depends on the extent of microloans being used to finance exports rather than locally-consumed goods and services—does anyone know the breakdown there?

2. Is the problem that microloans are meant to solve one of financial liquidity or something else?

»» Posted by: conan on August 21, 2007 05:33 AM

Chat Bubble Comment

interesting piece.  however, seems like the counter-arguments presented are as lacking in empirical data as the proponents of microfinance that he criticizes.  so while the intellectual perspective is thought-provoking, i don’t know that i give it any more weight than 30 years and 50-100 million people involved with microfinance / microcredit.

that said, i think the perspective of moving up the food chain and providing larger loans to more significant entrepreneurial activity is appealing… except that, this is also a challenging issue of capital access.  even in the US, “small business” can be up to several hundred people & tens of millions of dollars, and still perhaps have limited capital except from debt & cashflow.  what might be more interesting is to provide small business equity markets to help finance entrepreneurial endeavor at all scale & sizes.

furthermore, i’m not sure the author’s ideals & microfinance are necessarily at odds—you might consider individual access to microcredit the very first step in creating a “microfico” score that over time could be used to gain bigger & bigger loans, where the mature entrepreneur is taking out 6 or 7 figure loans & providing tens or hundreds of jobs.

overall, i appreciate the food for thought & it’s useful to consider other financial channels & market methods that might help the poor.  that said, i think it’s a little short-sighted to make the case that all microfinance activity is negative in its contributions to society.

here’s to a bigger tent for a wide variety of financial access & market-based solutions, including both microfinance and microequity.  may a thousand flowers bloom.

- dave mcclure

[full disclosure: i serve on the board of Unitus, and i am definitely biased in favor of microfinance.  however, i like to keep an open mind in case i come across a better one wink]

»» Posted by: Dave McClure on September 3, 2007 09:53 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

It’s a profound start.  Rather than spending your time negatively analyzing microfinance on your G4 ibook, drinking a non-fat soy latte, focus on the good.  Sure this brings to light microfinance’s certain faults, but it doesn’t do much else.  I spent a summer in Nigeria and Kenya documenting the effects of microfinance.  Have you ever interviewed a lady claiming she was going to take her own life until microfinance gave her inspiration to carry on?  Anyone can read a book.

»» Posted by: Michael on October 12, 2007 10:36 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

Very interesting analysis. The two scenarios need to be revisited. The example of a microfinancier lending $200 to each of 500 women to buy sewing machines and eventually compete among themselves, is simply not realistic to say the least. A microfinancier will generally lend to 500 women, 100 of whom will buy sewing machines, 200 will engage in buy and sell micro businesses, 100 will engage in some form of farming, 100 will set up hairdressing or similar shops which will have apprentices and thus create jobs The 100 women borrowing to buy sewing machines may end up creating a cooperative and rather than compete among themselves negotiate to sell their products at better prices.  Given the right training and capacity building, they will end up doing what the savy entrepreneur will do and even better.

Lets give micro credit a chance. If we were to vote, I will vote for micro credit because as a promoter of a micro financial institution, I have seen the tremendous good micro credit does if packaged with appropriate training.

Cami Lawong (MBA)
General Manager (of a micro financial institution)
Prima Commercial Fund
BP 9198 Douala , Cameroon

email

»» Posted by: Cami Lawong on October 21, 2007 01:40 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

I am manager for a microcapital provider, and I do agree to some extend in your conclusions. The objective is to create jobs, and it the state’s responsibility make up the premises for doing that. When you look at the World Banks report “Doing Business in 2008”, you find out the North Amarica and Europe are the nations on the top of the list, and they are also the countries that receive the investments. Simply because they have the best investment climate. The challenge for many develloping countries is to establish a climate for investors to attract investments. That mean that they must have a legislation that makes it easy to set up an enterprise, register property, protect investors etc. With easy and transparent systems you will also eradict corruption, which is also very stimulatiog for investments. In these environments do we need microcredit? Yes, we do. In addition to big enterprises that employs many people, you need a lot of small busniesses that serve and supply the big industry and support the comunity with services. As long the present financial banks do not serve the poor, microfinance institutions is a necessity.

»» Posted by: Jo Henriksen on October 26, 2007 02:22 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

I’m a researcher for a business intelligence firm located here in Manila.  And just like those employed here, I’m underpaid.  I understand and appreciate your attempt to highlight the inadequacies and weaknesses of microcredit.  I also agree that formal employment is important to ensure freedom from a life poverty.  However, I think the issue here is not merely a problem of microfinance or microcredit not delivering its intended results.  I think the problem rests on lack of development (or business?) strategy that is comprehensive and overarching.  Business Support Organizations (BSOs) are needed to compliment microcredit strategies in which start-ups are taught properly how to manage their resources.  It is a “Nanny Management Scheme” that provides guidance to those wanting to run their own businesses.

In the Philippines, for instance, the poor constitute the informal sector because of lack of available jobs.  Those with formal employment get out of their way to do small business on the side just to augment their income because their salaries are too small to make them get by.  As a result, household enterprises sprout like mushrooms and are fast becoming a trend to an unemployment-stricken country like the Philippines.  The absence of jobs forces people to look for other means just to live decently. Microcredit provides that missing piece that could facilitate the poor’s escape from poverty. 

But as pointed out by the study, it’s not enough.  Even if borrowers pay their loans 97% of the time does not mean their socio-economic conditions have improved.  In most cases, they borrow from relatives and friends just to pay their loans on time (Mullainathan, 2003).  This gap (adverse selection) is something microcredit providers fail to address but can be monitored and answered by BSOs.  BSOs can provide the needed management and technical assistance that can prevent poor borrowers from falling deeper into poverty.

»» Posted by: Lem Cacho on December 18, 2007 04:18 AM

Chat Bubble Comment

It seems the author may be the one missing the mark.

He neglects to recognize that microfinance programs target many citizens who may not have marketable jobs skills, but are fairly adept at running an informal-sector vegetable stand, raising livestock or selling secondhand clothes. These are the people unemployable by the single dynamic entrepreneur in his example, yet all can expand their business with the help of microcredit. Clearly, MFIs are not the “quick-fix” answer to widespread poverty, but isn’t it a good thing that individual lives are improving? Isn’t something better than nothing? Just what would a “significant” alleviation of poverty look like, anyway?

I would never suggest that medium-size enterprises should be left in the dust in favor of microenterprise, but I think it’s plausible that there is room for everyone in the credit market, and that is exactly what Yunus (and many other MFIs) are working toward. Offering a new credit service doesn’t mean stealing resources from other divisions, but interlinking them all might be the most powerful strategy for poverty alleviation yet.

»» Posted by: Caitlin Ewing on January 29, 2008 11:38 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

What an incredibly narrow and ignorant “corporate” view of an innovative tool which has begun to change lives everywhere it has been given a chance.  It is this kind of business bigotry that impedes the progress of individuals at these most “hopeless” levels of developing societies.  Mostly unskilled in traditional industry, many microentrepreneurs, both male and female, prove to be quite competent at useful and needed village business. The added value of human dignity seems beyond the understanding of this “analyst.” Creativity has always met obstinate resistance from those who are gutlessly following a path someone else blazed for them. Rhetoric is cheap. Action demanded.  It is gratifying to see so many thoughtful comments rebutting this trivialization of a great movement.

»» Posted by: Victoria Smith Downing on February 16, 2008 08:34 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

The scenario of loaning $100,000 to one savvy entrepreneur to start a business employing 500 people, versus loaning $200 to 500 individual seamstresses, is interesting, but it’s also pretty simplistic.

First, it assumes there is a savvy entrepreneur out there capable of setting up a garment factory employing 500 people. This may or may not be the case.

In fact, it might be that the best pathway of coming up with such an entrepreneur is to loan money to 500 people and provide education. It may be that one of the 500 may employ 2, then 10, then 100 fellows. It may be that several of the seamstresses will band together and form a partnership that continues to grow. In any event, giving somebody $100,000 to form a business employing 500 may turn out to be the riskier proposition—unless that person already has experience in running a business of that size.

Unfortunately, the people who have such experience are often busy… running businesses of that size.

You also face the problem that people whose only experience is in running businesses that are already large often are not particularly skilled in starting and growing a business.

Secondly, as someone else has already pointed out, 500 microentrepreneurs are not likely to all compete directly against each other. In the first place, it just isn’t going to happen. In the second, they won’t all be going into business at the same time. As market conditions shift the seamstress option may become less attractive than the restaurant option.

Third, as someone else has already pointed out, the microentrepreneur might or might not be able to get a job at the factory.

And fourth, the author assumes an either/or scenario: either the money is there for microfinance, or it’s there to fund a garment factory, but not both.

Again, this may or may not be the case. As an individual thinking about taking some of my money and putting it into microfinance (via one of the web-based opportunities that are cropping up for this), I might find it more attractive (and possibly more practical) to loan my money to a microentrepreneur than to the author’s “savvy entrepreneur.”

That said, there’s some food for thought here. Which is better? I don’t know. I think that most likely we need both.

»» Posted by: John on March 2, 2008 05:26 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

I read this article with interest because I made my first small investment in a microfinance project in February. (Yesterday I received an e-mail that the borrower has made her first payment.)

I’ve worked for non-profit organizations, volunteered, and donated to charities. My expectation of each is different, in keeping with its stated mission. I choose a charitable organization by how well its goals match mine, and judge it by how well it fulfills those goals. Usually I give with no expectation of being repaid, but the idea of microfinance intrigued me and I decided to give it a try.

One thing I noticed right off: Some of the borrowers wanted a loan to improve their homes, education their children, etc. Worthy goals all, but not what I think of as microfinance; there are traditional charities that provide that kind of assistance. I chose a borrower who wanted to buy a cow for her farm and sell the milk (funny, because I’m a city girl). After reading this article I am more than ever convinced that was a good decision and I would gladly do it again. But after reading this I think the next time I invest (as I almost certainly will) I will look for a borrower who has at least one employee, or maybe a group that are supporting each other and cross-guaranteeing the loan.

»» Posted by: Karen on March 8, 2008 04:04 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

I am currently working with Microfinance here in West Africa and your article took the words right out of my mouth.  Thank you for researching and writing this!

While I agree that Microfinance is a great tool and definitely has its place in development economics, I see women who have taken out 15 or 16 loans over 7 or 8 years and whose life is essentially the same as before she was “empowered” by a micro loan.  I think that the lack of industry and employment opportunity is CRITICAL to development and, in a trickle down sense, to the success of micro-finance initiatives as well.

»» Posted by: Mary on March 12, 2008 12:12 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

Very interesting article.  Definitely opened up my mind on microloans.

Charles

»» Posted by: Charles on March 31, 2008 09:22 AM

Chat Bubble Comment

Very interesting piece, its mind opening and attention grasping.While I agreed with all the propositions made by both the aurthor of this piece and other contribuitors, I also like to add that micro credit scheme should be used in conjuction with other developmental tools, e.g.microleasing.Micro credit as a stand alone tool may not be able to alleviate poverty.But when combined with the existing institutional frameworks, great result would be accomplished.Existing commercial banks should focus on lending to large corporations who will create jobs for qualified employees.Microfinance houses should also continue to run to offer micro credits to the peasant entrepreneurs and other micro businesses.However, we must note that poverty will continue to reign in the earth till ‘’thy kingdom come’’.For ‘’the poor shall never cease in the land’’ ,says the Holy scripture.

while will that be so? Given all oppurtunities, not every one will want to go to school and be educated, not every body will want to work,and there will always one foolish people or the other in government who prefers to embessle and waste funds ment for national development on personal agrandishment,e.g Nigeria.But most importantly,poverty will continue to be an issue, because people failed to obey and to beleive God.

»» Posted by: Yusuf Sunday on April 3, 2008 05:37 AM

Chat Bubble Post a Comment

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Remember my personal information

Please enter the word you see in the image below: