With a group of people who largely agree microfinance, it becomes all to easy to slip into a routine of accepting the industry as a whole. I came across the piece below and wanted to share it because I think that opposing views are always important to read and understand as they will allow for a better understanding of our own positions.
Please read this and add your comments/responses/rants/criticisms about the piece.
Jonathan Lewis: "Microfinance: Virtuous or Vulgar?"
My blog last week on the deplorable microfinance situation in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh concluded that -- while hysteria and expediency are precipitating a media and political overreaction -- the microfinance industry needs to take heed.
The mythology of microfinance extols the marketplace as a cure-all for poverty, then resists governmental oversight as counterproductive and simultaneously ignores the industry's bad actors. That is a formula for failure.
Andhra Pradesh brings forth an important question which needs asking, and I was remiss in over-looking it: Why is it indispensable for microfinance programs to achieve financial sustainability?
The most radical and startling economic development driver for microfinance programs is the expectation that they must be profitable or -- in economic development terms -- sustainable. This is not a standard typically used for other public goods and services.
Most anti-poverty programs -- from health clinics to water projects to schools -- are budgeted with long-term external subsidies, donations, grants and in-kind assistance. As public goods, it is expected that the long-term community benefits deserve underwriting by taxpayers or donors.
Neither Silicon Valley companies in California nor destitute truck drivers in Cameroon are expected to capitalize their own roads with private investment repaid from private economic activity. Public sector investments of $1.00 in United States roadways generate $6.00 of economic activity and the indirect return in jobs, taxes and quality of life improvements is deemed sufficient.
In contrast, microfinance funders expect the poor to bootstrap themselves into profitability. If local microfinance programs don't increase microloan interest rates to at least cover costs, development funders and commercial markets soon look away.
Because international aid agencies, governments, foundations and donors do not have unlimited funds and because microfinance competes for scarce global resources with other worthy causes, the microfinance intelligentsia has convinced itself that private capital markets can be a steady cornucopia of cash. In a virtuous circle, social investors invest, microfinance pays profits and poverty is whisked away. "Doing good by doing well" goes the slogan.
As I raised in a recent speech in San Francisco, "Is social entrepreneurship about creating a viable asset class to make money while doing good or about building a social movement for economic justice? Are we advocates for the poor or advisers to the well-off?"
Paradoxically for an anti-poverty movement built on capitalism, a whiff of "microfinance Marxism" hovers in the air. As Marx viewed the human condition principally in terms of economics, some microfinance leaders are attracted exclusively to its economic entrepreneurism. As impoverished women are monetized, the unintended consequence is microfinance fulfills its mission by making women more profitable chattel (or, in the parlance, creating self-help business opportunities). The idiocy often begins by defining the microfinance mission as access to financial services, instead of poverty reduction.
In the absence of any other option, there is still something vulgar about charging the impoverished a penny more than is necessary to make microfinance programs self-sufficient. Our enlightened self-interest and our own humanity should question the wisdom of asking the poorest of the poor to pay dearly for their own futures.
Tags: criticism, impact, jonathan, lewis, microfinance, news
Permalink Reply by Sasidhar Thumuluri on December 1, 2010 at 6:03pm
Permalink Reply by Oluka Peter on December 2, 2010 at 3:18pm
Permalink Reply by Tom Murphy on December 2, 2010 at 4:52pm
Permalink Reply by Tom Murphy on December 2, 2010 at 4:57pm
Permalink Reply by Sasidhar Thumuluri on December 2, 2010 at 10:58pm
Permalink Reply by Sasidhar Thumuluri on December 2, 2010 at 11:12pm
Permalink Reply by Sasidhar Thumuluri on December 2, 2010 at 11:37pm
Permalink Reply by Sasidhar Thumuluri on December 4, 2010 at 12:40am
Permalink Reply by Nita Nehru on January 6, 2011 at 1:14pm Great discussion going - glad I'm joining in.
I personally believe that Microfinance DOES need to make a profit because, unfortunately, profits are the only road to sustainability. There are many great non-profits and NGOs that do wonderful work but suddenly, that work comes to an end because their funding dries up. This would be a tragedy for the microfinance sector. So I dont think the issue is being profitable, but rather, how MUCH profit is necessary to stay afloat. The problems inherent in a profit motive, however, are that it is hard to remain dedicated to making only minimal profits if one sees the chance for making much more. Hence, high interest rates charged to borrowers.
But my understanding of the MFI crisis in Andhra Pradesh was that it was not due to high interest loans alone, but also because borrowers were over-indebted to many different institutions, not only one. This leads me to believe that there must be some government regulation / oversight into MFIs to ensure that MFIs cannot take borrowers who already have outstanding loans from other institutions. Correct?? Thoughts??
Permalink Reply by Oluka Peter on January 8, 2011 at 2:37am nita i agree with you based our own experience in uganda. the issue of profits sustaining mfis does not need debate. what you raise as how much profit is what needs to debated upon. once upon in uganda mfis (then ngos) were charging exploitative rates on their loans and using the groups to mobilize loan repayment without ever rewarding these groups for the wonderful job done to make the mfi report 100% recovery rates. the oversight role of government ought to look in to this too. in uganda the borrowers were in some instances borrowing to repay their loans. and when the road of borrowing to repay eventually closed as expected, some of these clients lost the little they had to the lending mfis.
once again lending rates that go through the roof must be debated by the industry. there is no need exploiting those who have no access to financial services just because they do not have access to financial services.
Permalink Reply by Tom Murphy on January 10, 2011 at 2:49pm
Permalink Reply by Tom Murphy on January 10, 2011 at 3:16pm © 2013 Created by SEEP Social.