Archive for: China

Microfinance Technology Headlines for Nov. 27, 2007

by Jim Rosenberg: Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Pakistan: State Bank issues draft policy
The launch of Branchless Banking (BB) by using delivery channels such as retail agents and mobile phones was announced Saturday by State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) Governor Dr Shamshad Akhtar.  The new system offers a significantly cheaper alternative to conventional branch-based banking and allows financial institutions and other commercial players to offer financial services outside the premises of traditional banks. BB can be used to substantially increase the outreach of financial services to “un-banked” communities. The provision of enabling a regulatory environment by careful risk-reward balancing is, however, necessary to use such models. (CGAP related resource)

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Now showing in China - Mobile banking, the use of agents, microfinance and technology

by Jim Rosenberg: Tuesday, September 11, 2007

CGAP has translated many publications into ChineseGreat news…several of CGAP’s publications have been released in Chinese and are now available online. Here are two of our favorites:

Using Technology to Build Inclusive Financial Systems
Focus Note No. 32, January 2006 (Chinese, pdf)

Some of the innovations commercial banks need to service poor clients may be found in information and communications technologies (ICTs).This Focus Note addresses the following questions: Can banking technologies, applied innovatively in developing countries, make microfinance profitable for formal financial institutions? Will they reduce costs to such an extent that banks could profitably serve even those whom MFIs have mostly excluded to date, such as very poor and remote rural customers? Will these customers be comfortable using technology?

Use of Agents in Branchless Banking for the Poor: Rewards, Risks, and Regulation
Focus Note No. 38, October 2006 (Chinese, pdf)

Use of Agents in Branchless Banking for the Poor: Rewards, Risks, and Regulation
This Focus Note examines the experience of five pioneering countries–Brazil, India, South Africa, the Philippines, and Kenya–where agent-assisted branchless banking that targets poor customers is already a reality. It introduces the main issues involved in regulating branchless banking, particularly regarding the use of retail agents.