The Andhra Pradesh Microfinance Crisis in India: Manifestation, Causal Analysis, and Regulatory Response
The Andhra Pradesh Microfinance Crisis in India: Manifestation, Causal Analysis, and Regulatory Response
The Andhra Pradesh Microfinance Crisis in India: Manifestation, Causal Analysis, and Regulatory Response
Anurag Priyadarshee 1
anuragpriyadarshee@yahoo.com
Asad K. Ghalib 2
October 2011
asad@bcs.org.uk
www.manchester.ac.uk/bwpi
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Abstract
The microfinance sector in Indias state of Andhra Pradesh was recently marred by a series
of mishaps that occurred due to extensive lending, which resulted in over-indebtedness and
ultimately, defaults. Lending institutions resorted to coercive measures for loan recovery that
led to suicides amongst borrowers. In this paper, we explore the reasons that led to such
circumstances. We will consider how the widespread operations and omnipresent Self-Help
Groups, together with their linkages with banks, attracted private microfinance providers.
This, coupled with the absence of adequate regulatory mechanisms, resulted in over-lending
to the poor. The paper discusses policy implications of the various regulatory measures that
the Government subsequently took to harness and regulate micro-lending practices in the
state. It is argued that the regulatory measures initiated to address the issue do not focus on
the social structures, i.e., the unequal distribution of the community institutional infrastructure
base for delivery of microfinance among different states, and the singular focus of privatesector MFIs on maximizing profits in an inefficiently regulated environment, that gave rise to
the current circumstances.
Dr Asad K. Ghalib is External Associate at the Brooks World Poverty Institute, The
University of Manchester, UK.
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not reflect
the official policy or position of their respective institutions.
1. Introduction
Increased efforts to fight poverty have led institutions to devise and implement various
poverty reduction programmes. Amongst others, the sudden increase in specialised NGOs
such as Microfinance Institutions (MFIs), particularly over the last two decades has made it
possible for many impoverished people to gain easier access to finance and related services.
Microfinance has been one of the key models in combating poverty as it provides a broad
range of financial services such as deposits, loans, payment services, money transfers, and
insurance to poor and low-income households and their microenterprises (ADB 2000).
In India, microfinance products are disbursed through two broad mechanisms: (a)
Microfinance Institutions, which may be operating in the form of NGOs, or Non Bank Finance
Companies (NBFCs); and (b) Self Help Group (SHG)-bank linkage. Over the decades,
despite significant growth of institutional microfinance, estimates show that depth and
breadth of outreach in the country has been considerably low, with just a fraction of the
potential clients being served. Imai et al. (2010:2) argue that despite the vast network of
banking and cooperative finance institutions and strong micro components in various
programmes, the performance of the formal financial sector in India still fails to adequately
reach, or reflect and respond to the requirements of the poor. According to Latifee (2006),
even though South Asia is home to the largest number of MFIs and MFI outreach, millions of
poor people still have no access to formal or semi-formal financial services. Microfinance
reaches only an estimated 10 to 12 percent of the poor in India including the outreach of
SHGs, NGO MFIs, NBFCs, commercial banks and cooperatives. Basu and Srivastava (2005)
contend that Indias rural poor have very little access to finance from formal sources.
Microfinance approaches have tried to fill the gap. Among these, the growth of SHG-Bank
Linkage has played a significant role, but even then outreach remains modest in terms of the
proportion of poor households served. A survey on membership of microcredit groups in the
country by Dewan and Somanathan (2007) found evidence that participation among the
poorest households was relatively low, whereas in terms of depth of programme outreach,
estimates by Ghate (2007) reveal that there were about 2.2 million SHGs with about 31
million members, only about half of which were poor. Latifee (2006) reports on the breadth of
programme outreach and concludes that almost three-quarters of the total microfinance
clients in India are concentrated in just four southern states, namely Andhra Pradesh, Tamil
Nadu, Karnataka and Kerala. Large parts of Northern and North Eastern states have
remained underserved by the sector. Basu and Srivastava (2005) claim that in an economy
as vast and varied as Indias; there is substantial scope for diverse microfinance approaches
to coexist. Private sector microfinanciers need to acquire greater professionalism, and the
government can help by creating a flexible architecture for microfinance innovations,
including through a more enabling policy, legal and regulatory framework (ibid.).
While outreach has been poor, over the past few years the microfinance sector in India has
morphed from being a saviour of the poor to the whipping boy of the press, and a poster
child of exploitation of the vulnerable. According to Indian politicians and many in the press,
the exploitation of the poor has been led by profit-making companies which have quickly
grown to dominate an industry that was once populated by non-profits (Whalan 2010).
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Recent events relating to MFIs in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh (AP) have been in the
news, whereby microfinance, which had been hitherto promoted as a solution to various
poverty problems over the past few decades, was seen as exploitative of the poor by a large
section of Indian media and the people in Andhra Pradesh.
The root cause of this persistent decline lies in MFIs having lost sight of why microloans
were introduced in the first place: providing credit to those who could not access mainstream
financial services and thus faced difficulties in borrowing at low interest rates, thereby having
to resort to borrowing from moneylenders at exorbitant rates. As the sector grew and
expanded over the years, MFIs gradually turned from non-profit to profit-making
institutions, finding for-profit microfinancing, in some cases, quite lucrative (Lenz 2010).
When they start looking for profit, they become loan-sharks states Yunus (2011), who
argues that the ultimate objective of micro-financiers is to ensure financial inclusion and not
making profit.
In this paper, we analyse the causal factors that led to perhaps the biggest existential crisis
the microfinance industry in India has faced since its inception. Following this brief
introduction, we examine how a series of factors led to rapid and substantial growth of the
Self Help Group movement in Andhra Pradesh and how various other private MFIs took
advantage of such a mature presence, causing an inundation of the market, and ultimately to
the crises being witnessed today. Responses of the AP Government as well as the Reserve
Bank of India are examined at length and finally the paper concludes by arguing that
regulatory measures subsequently initiated to deal with the issue are focussed more on the
symptoms as opposed to the root cause that led to the crisis in the first place.
Compared to other states in India, the growth and development of the microfinance sector
followed a unique course in AP. Although all states in the country experienced initiation and
growth of the SHG movement, the mainstay of Indian microfinance, the state government of
AP systematically nurtured and deepened the institution of SHG through the use of public
resources due to a number of political motives. The AP government constituted an
autonomous body, named Society for Elimination of Rural Poverty (SERP), which is
implementing the Indira Kranthi Patham (IKP) project in all the 22 rural districts of AP. The
project methodology involves mobilizing and organizing rural women in the SHGs consisting
of ten to fifteen members. Activities of the SHGs revolve around regular savings by their
members, credit (from both internal and external sources) and regular meetings (weekly
excepting in case of newly-formed SHGs). The SHGs have been federated at village levels
into Village Organisations (VOs). The VOs have been further federated as Mandal
Samakhyas or Mandal Organisations (MOs) at mandal (sub-district) levels. All SHGs in a
village contribute two members to their VO (one member in case of more than twenty SHGs
in a village), while every VO in a mandal sends two of its members to the concerned MO. All
the MOs have organised themselves into Zila Samakhyas or District Organisations (DOs) at
the district levels (Government of Andhra Pradesh, 2009). The SHGs, VOs, MOs, and the
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DOs are being increasingly involved in implementing and monitoring various government
development programmes through IKP.
In AP, this network of SHGs at different levels is the largest such network among all the
states in India and constitutes a critical infrastructural base for microfinance activities
including those of private sector MFIs in the state. According to a publication by the National
Bank of Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD 2010: 3), AP has 14,482,16 SHGs
out of a total of 69,53,250 SHGs in the country, thus accounting for 20.83 percent of the total
SHGs in India, while it houses only 7.37 percent of Indias population according to the 2001
census (Government of India, undated). Due to this rich infrastructure base, the MFIs do not
need to invest in organising the poor and generating awareness on microcredit in Andhra
Pradesh, unlike in other states. Microfinance, as a lending model plays an inherent and vital
role in organising the poor for two fundamental purposes: reducing transaction costs and
joint liability. High transaction costs limit the number of people who can be provided with
access to formal financial services, especially those who are very poor or live in remote rural
areas, which are relatively expensive to reach, making MFIs less efficient and therefore, less
sustainable. Organising the poor helps to reduce transaction costs and studies have
demonstrated that the intermediation of NGOs and SHGs helped banks to reduce
transaction costs by between 21 and 41 percent when compared with the benchmark
situation (that is, of direct lending) (Puhazhendi 1995), and as stated by Llanto and Chua
(1996), in the BankNGOSHGPoor linkage, the agency in each of the successive layers
has comparative advantage over its principal in lending to the poor, thus minimising
transaction costs. This, in turn, contributes to the viability and sustainability of lending to the
poor. In terms of joint liability, studies have noted that regular payment behaviour is
encouraged by the group-based lending model, in which group members, although not jointly
or individually responsible for others payments, are subject to certain social stipulations that
ensure timely payments. The closely-knit social fabric in rural areas and the social ties
between borrowing group members translates into internal group pressure to repay loans.
Such peer monitoring significantly affects the borrowing groups performance through
stimulating intra-group insurance (see for instance, Conning 1999; Wydick 1999; De Aghion
and Gollier 2000; Hermes and Lensink, et al. 2005; Setboonsarng and Parpiev 2008).
The presence of such, existing organised groups of the poor resulted in the largest
concentration of MFIs in AP among all the states in India. Thus, while AP households had
much better access to microfinance than all the other Indian states through the statesponsored microfinance programme, private MFIs flocked in to AP to leverage on the SHG
network already existing in the state. It was much easier for private MFIs to start their
businesses in AP than in other states which led to an oversupply of microfinance, more
specifically of microcredit, to AP households and eventually resulted in the events and crisis
that was witnessed subsequently.
elaborated by Pierre Bourdieu (Bourdieu, 2005). The aspiration paradox in western life is
said to occur when a family invests in holidays, a fancy car, housing or consumer goods
often using a credit card without realising that the debts piling up are going to cause them
to go bankrupt (Olsen, 2008: 6). The paradox is also observed in the case of poor
households as they very often fail to accurately assess and quantify their repayment
capabilities due to aspiration paradox. Thus, many poor households in AP took advantage of
the easy availability of credit and borrowed far beyond their repayment capabilities from
various microfinance sources. The MFIs, for their part, offered multiple loans to the same
borrower household without following due diligence, as it served their business interests.
Worse still, some MFIs collaborated with consumer goods companies to supply consumer
goods such as televisions as part of their credit programmes. As the poor aspired to own
such goods, they were happy to receive them. Possession of such goods only exacerbated
their already worsening indebtedness as such investments did not generate any income.
The poor borrowers therefore started defaulting in repayment and the MFIs resorted to
coercive methods for loan recovery. Many borrowers were forced to approach moneylenders
to borrow at exorbitant rates of interest to repay to MFIs. When the situation became
impossible, some of these borrowers committed suicide and the matter caught the attention
of media. The issue became political. A Minister in the government of AP admitted on 3rd
December 2010 that 75 suicide cases had come to the notice of AP government by that date
(FullHyd.com, 2010). Even microfinance practitioners such as Yunus acknowledged that
microfinance in India had taken a wrong turn and the private sector MFIs were treating
microcredit as money-making proposition solely to earn profits for themselves (The
Economic Times, 2011: 14). Yunus argues that while he is not against making a profit, he
denounces firms that seek windfalls and pervert the original intent of microfinance: helping
the poor (Lee and David, 2010).
The state has a major role and responsibility to play in terms of providing and managing the
infrastructural support to make financial services available to a large majority of people,
including the poor. Besley (1994) opines that it may be a better idea for the state to intervene
in credit markets to support the poor rather than adopting measures aimed at assetredistribution. According to Lapenu (2002), financial systems require state interventions to
correct market failures. The state needs to intervene to correct market failures and strive for
deepening and broadening of financial infrastructures through measures aimed at institutionbuilding, as well as promulgation and implementation of enabling regulatory and legislative
mechanisms. One important aspect requiring state intervention is the institutional
innovations to improve the outreach of financial systems, described by Lapenu (2002: 299)
as public good.
The responsibility therefore lies with the state to intervene and correct the current
microfinance delivery situation which excludes a majority of the poor in India. Such
intervention may include providing a more enabling legislative and regulatory framework, or
involving suitably located and relevant state institutions in the delivery of microfinance as the
presence of a publicly owned banking structure can enhance the breadth of microfinance
outreach (Lapenu, 2002: 309). An example of such state intervention is the highly
successful state-owned Bank of Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives (BAAC), which
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reaches 80 percent of the 5.6 million rural households in Thailand (Yaron et al., 1997).
Lapenu (2002: 316) points out that in the rural financial system, state-owned institutions
may achieve considerable outreach compared with most NGOs and private commercial
banks not yet involved in microfinance [emphasis added]. Lapenu (2002) argues that the
presence of such institutions can also facilitate growth of private MFIs, as the financial and
technical infrastructure thus created will improve the profitability and outreach of such MFIs
to poor households.
Given the existing infrastructure of MFIs in the country, it would have been more desirable
from the industrys perspective as well as from the perspectives of the poor if the states
other than AP had also devised their own models of developing appropriate infrastructure for
the (micro) finance industry to grow and improve the access to financial services for the poor.
This would have perhaps caused more equal distribution of MFIs in other states and the
pressure of supply may not have been so intense in AP. In fact, for want of development of
such infrastructural support, poor households are faced with an acute short supply of credit
even within microfinance programmes in states other than AP (Priyadarshee et al., 2011).
5. Concluding remarks
The recent turmoil witnessed within the microfinance sector in the Indian state of Andhra
Pradesh was watched the world over as incidences unfolded to reveal weaknesses in
regulatory and policy mechanisms. This paper explored the causal factors that led to such
happenings and argues that the richness of Self Help Group infrastructural base developed
as a result of certain state-sponsored programmes attracted private-sector MFIs. Such MFIs,
in an attempt to maximize their profits oversupplied credit to the poor. Easy availability of
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credit made the poor households victims of a social phenomenon called aspiration paradox
due to which they could not adequately assess their repayment capabilities. The situation
was compounded due to some MFIs offering credit in terms of consumable items such as
televisions that did not generate income and further worsened their indebtedness. The poor
borrowers thus started defaulting on repayment and the MFIs resorted to coercive methods
to recover their loans. This series of events led to some borrowers taking extreme steps to
end their lives, thus drawing greater attention to the crisis.
The government subsequently adopted certain regulatory measures in order to address the
issue. These, however appear to focus on the symptoms and not on the root cause of the
malaise. As discussed at length above, the situation arose primarily due to the social
structures, i.e., the unequal distribution of the community institutional infrastructure base for
delivery of microfinance among different states, and the singular focus of private-sector MFIs
on maximizing their profits in an inefficiently regulated environment. These, nonetheless do
not seem to be on the policy agenda of the government. The absence of such policy
measures, may lead the private microfinance sector in the future to face similar
circumstances in different Indian states.
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Research Directors
Professor Armando Barrientos
Professor Rorden Wilkinson
Contact:
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The University of Manchester
Humanities Bridgeford Street Building
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Manchester
M13 9PL
United Kingdom
Email: bwpi@manchester.ac.uk
www.manchester.ac.uk/bwpi
www.manchester.ac.uk/bwpi
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