This document provides an overview of the microfinance industry in India. It analyzes the potential of the Indian microfinance industry and examines recent government policies to boost growth. It describes various microfinance models popular in India and reviews literature on the impacts of microcredit. The need and scope for microfinance in India is discussed, along with objectives such as studying the role of nationalized banks in promoting microfinance services and identifying opportunities and threats of bank schemes.
This document provides an overview of the microfinance industry in India. It analyzes the potential of the Indian microfinance industry and examines recent government policies to boost growth. It describes various microfinance models popular in India and reviews literature on the impacts of microcredit. The need and scope for microfinance in India is discussed, along with objectives such as studying the role of nationalized banks in promoting microfinance services and identifying opportunities and threats of bank schemes.
This document provides an overview of the microfinance industry in India. It analyzes the potential of the Indian microfinance industry and examines recent government policies to boost growth. It describes various microfinance models popular in India and reviews literature on the impacts of microcredit. The need and scope for microfinance in India is discussed, along with objectives such as studying the role of nationalized banks in promoting microfinance services and identifying opportunities and threats of bank schemes.
This document provides an overview of the microfinance industry in India. It analyzes the potential of the Indian microfinance industry and examines recent government policies to boost growth. It describes various microfinance models popular in India and reviews literature on the impacts of microcredit. The need and scope for microfinance in India is discussed, along with objectives such as studying the role of nationalized banks in promoting microfinance services and identifying opportunities and threats of bank schemes.
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SYNOPSIS
TOPIC: Determinants of Success factors in Microfinance Industry in India
MI CROFI NANCE - AN OVERVI EW This industry report presents a detailed overview of the microfinance industry in India. The advent of new millennium witnessed significant developments in the Indian microfinance industry, which attracted the attention of several private sector andforeign banks.
The report analyzes the potential of Indian microfinance industry and examines the recent polices of Indian government to boost the growth of the industry. It describes various microfinance models popular in India and includes a note on the leading players in the Indian microfinance industry. Microfinance in India is approaching a historic 'tipping point' that could lead to a massive poverty reduction in the next five to ten years.
I NDI AN MI CROFI NANCE CONTEXT Indian public policy for rural finance from 1950s to till date mirrors the patterns observed worldwide. Increasing access to credit for the poor has always remained at the core of Indian planning in fight against poverty. The assumption behind expanding outreach of financial services, mainly credit was that the welfare costs of exclusion from the banking sector, especially for rural poor are very high. Starting late 1960s, India was home to one of largest state intervention in rural credit market and has been euphemistically referred to as Social banking' phase. It saw nationalization of existing private commercial banks, massive expansion of branch network in rural areas, mandatory directed credit to priority sectors of the economy, subsidized rates of interest and creation of a new set of rural banks at district level and an Apex bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) at national level. These measures resulted in impressive gains in rural outreach and volume of credit. As a result, between 1961 and 2000 the average population per bank branch fell tenfold from about 140 thousand to 14000 (Burgess & Pande, 2005) and the share of institutional agencies in rural credit increased from 7.3% 1951 to 66% in 1991.
REVI EW OF LI TERATURE Develtere, P. and A. Huybrechts (2005). "The impact of microcredit on the poor in Bangladesh." Alternatives 30(2): 165- 189. Abstract: This article presents a comparative overview of the most relevant findings from studies of the impact of microcredit institutions like the Grameen Bank and BRAC in Bangladesh. It first evaluates the evidence on economic impacts, which suggests that the vulnerability of bank members has been reduced even if there is no consensus about whether the two institutions also reduce poverty. It then considers the social impact, especially in relation to the situation of poor women and to various spill-over effects in different spheres of social and economic life. McI ntosh, C.,A. de J anvry, et al. (2005). "How rising competition among microfinance institutions affects incumbent lenders." Economic Journal 115(506): 987-1004. Abstract: This article uses data from Uganda's largest incumbent microfinance institution to analyze the impact of entry by competing lenders on client behaviour. We observe that rising competition does not lead to an increase in client dropout rate, but induces a decline in repayment performance and savings deposited with the incumbent, suggesting rising multiple loan-taking by clients. This joint effect on dropout and repayment is consistent with some negative information about clients and is being shared across lenders. However, the observed decline in repayment rates in a context of rising multiple loan-taking shows that information sharing about clients is far from complete. Easton,T. (2005). The hidden wealth of the poor. Economist, 377 (8451): 3-6, 11/5/2005. Notes: This article recognises microfinance as a strategy towards poverty alleviation. Traditionally, the poor were not viewed as investment worthy and were excluded from financial services. Other barriers to developing financial services for the poor include high and volatile inflation in developing countries, incompetent governments, and a lack of necessary legal framework for financial services. Corruption is a major deterrent to sound financial services because it raises the cost of each financial transaction and it undermines customers' confidence in the financial system. A World Bank study in India found that borrowers paid bribes ranging from 8 to 24% of the price of their loans. Also, inadequate public services like electricity to power computers make it difficult for financial firms to expand their services. More recently (since 1970's), there is a rise in experimentation and provision of microfinance for the poor that uses a bottom-up approach, ranging from credit, savings, remittances, to insurance. Non-profit organizations such as Opportunity International in Colombia and Grameen Bank in Bangladesh offer small loans to the very poor with low interest rates. Loans are offered to group members who must monitor and keep each other accountable for repayments, and in so doing, members are allowed to borrow larger sums of money. Microfinance seems successful in poverty alleviation. A World Bank report shows that there is a strong correlation between financial access and higher incomes. Increasingly, local and international banking giants are tapping into the microfinance market. McI ntosh, C.,A. de J anvry, et al. (2005). "How rising competition among microfinance institutions affects incumbent lenders." Economic Journal 115(506): 987-1004. Abstract: This article uses data from Uganda's largest incumbent microfinance institution to analyse the impact of entry by competing lenders on client behaviour. We observe that rising competition does not lead to an increase in client dropout rate, but induces a decline in repayment performance and savings deposited with the incumbent, suggesting rising multiple loan-taking by clients. This joint effect on dropout and repayment is consistent with some negative information about clients and is being shared across lenders. However, the observed decline in repayment rates in a context of rising multiple loan-taking shows that information sharing about clients is far from complete. McI ntosh,C.andB.Wydick(2005). "Competition and microfinance." Journal of Development Economics 78(2): 271- 298. Abstract: Competition between microfinance institutions (MFIs) in developing countries has increased dramatically in the last decade. We model the behavior of non-profit lenders, and show that their non-standard, client-maximizing objectives cause them to cross-subsidize within their pool of borrowers. Thus when competition eliminates rents on profitable borrowers, it is likely to yield a new equilibrium in which poor borrowers are worse off. As competition exacerbates asymmetric information problems over borrower indebtedness, the most impatient borrowers begin to obtain multiple loans, creating a negative externality that leads to less favorable equilibrium loan contracts for all borrowers. Benjamin,L.,J .S.Rubin,etal.(2004). "Community development financial institutions: Current issues and future prospects." Journal of Urban Affairs 26(2): 177-195. Abstract: Community development financial institutions (CDFIs) help to address the financial needs of under-served, predominantly low-income communities. CDFIs include community development banks, credit unions, business and microenterprise loan funds, and venture capital funds. Although CDFIs are a rapidly growing and an increasingly important area of community economic development, they have not received proportionate attention from academic researchers. This article begins to address the gap. It outlines the history of the CDFI industry and details how CDFIs are responding to three specific development needs: basic financial services; affordable credit for home purchase, rehabilitation, and maintenance; and loan and equity capital for business development. The article then considers the strengths and limitations of CDFIs, concentrating especially on the relationship between CDFIs and conventional financial institutions. It concludes by examining the impact that these alternative financial institutions realistically can hope to achieve. Mosley, P.andJ . Rock.(2004). " Microfinance, labour markets and poverty in Africa: astudy of six institutions." Journal of International Development 16(3): 467. Abstract: We examine a range of six African microfinance institutions with a view to assessing and if possible enhancing their poverty impact. The impact of microfinance loans is variable between institutions, with a tendency in particular for savings services to be taken up by people well below the poverty line, especially in South Africa and Kenya. However, many benefits to the poor from microfinance programmes, in Africa at least, are likely to come via an indirect route, via 'wider impacts' or 'spin-offs', rather than by through direct impacts on borrowers.
NEED & SCOPE OF MI CROFI NANCE Micro financing very much needed in India. (1) Regulation of microfinance institutions Provision of saving services Product innovation Organizational issues in microfinance Poverty impact of microfinance
OBJ ECTI VES To study the role of nationalized (commercial) Banks for promoting microfinance services To identify the opportunities and the threats of scheme provided by the Banks for microfinance To study some challenges faced by commercial banks for encouraging spread of Microfinance services among rural population To suggested the possible alternatives for positioning the scheme of banks to promoting microfinance services Find out the issue of the micro finance Comparative Analysis of Micro-finance Services offered to the poor. How does the client of two main models of microfinance, the SHG and the MFI model, differ? Does the level of indebtedness to moneylenders depend on the type of micro finance model one is client of?
Type of Research- Exploratory Research
Data sources: The research is based on secondary data and the data is collected from various websites, Journals, Magazines, Articles and Research Paper.