Observation: Microfinance institutions (MFIs) are largely being left out of branchless banking

by Jim Rosenberg: Thursday, July 10, 2008

This is an excerpt from a recent CGAP paper, The Early Experience with Branchless Banking. The paper synthesizes the observations and research of the CGAP Technology Program. Gautam Ivatury and Ignacio Mas wrote the paper, with substantial input from the entire program team. This blog series will cover seven observations, four uncertainties and four predictions for branchless banking - what we call mobile banking and other technology-enabled banking solutions.

 

Most MFI-led branchless banking initiatives have been small pilots or have had only limited success. Even though MFIs have strong local knowledge, product development acumen, and the ability to manage small loans, most lack the stable core banking systems and specialized technical skill to implement branchless banking models or tap into existing platforms.

In the Philippines, an initiative to let customers of rural banks use G-Cash instead of cash to make deposits and repayments has been constrained in part by the poor quality of banks’ core banking systems. Based on interviews with experts in the field and observations from our own visits, CGAP estimates that the vast majority of the approximately 750 rural banks will need an IT overhaul or major upgrade to participate. In Kenya, an MFI that substituted group loan cash repayments with repayments in M-Pesa found a different problem. Group loan borrowers made fewer on-time repayments under the new system. Customers no longer attended the group meetings that had helped to keep up repayment pressure.

On the other hand, those relatively few MFIs that have the financial resources and skills to deploy branchless banking have been among the first movers. Microfinance banks, including Tameer Bank in Pakistan and Xac Bank in Mongolia, are developing their own mobile banking channels and are partnering with mobile operators to reduce delivery costs and to reach unserved urban and rural areas.

Another way MFIs may get involved is  as partners for banks seeking to expand their market among the unbanked. SKS Microfinance in India has developed a mobile banking initiative in partnership with Andhra Bank, in which customers use designated SKS banking agents to deposit money into Andhra Bank accounts and use a mobile phone to repay SKS microloans. Small MFIs and local community-based organizations can also play on the other side—as correspondents for other, larger banks. This ensures them a steady revenue stream in a synergistic relationship with the larger bank, as long as they target different population segments. An interesting case is the intent of the Andhra Pradesh State government in India to use up to 30,000 village organizations (local federations of self-help groups [SHGs]), to act as a cash agent for payment of social services, for SHG members under their umbrella, as well as for local banks.

Finally, MFIs are also tackling branchless banking as a group to overcome their individual limitations. In Ecuador, for example, the Red Financiera Rural association of MFIs and cooperatives is planning to contract a technology provider to build and maintain core banking systems and branchless banking channels on behalf of the group to minimize up front costs and the expertise needed inside each member organization. This sharing of technology costs and expertise has perhaps the highest potential to bring MFIs onto payment networks and allow them to take advantage of mobile banking and other delivery channels they cannot implement alone.

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