Microfinance
in the Pacific Island Countries
Paul B McGuire, 1997
(viii+123 pages) |

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Executive Summary
Introduction
This report was
originally prepared for the Asian and Pacific Development Centre Regional Workshop on
Microfinance for the Poor in the Asia-Pacific (BANK POOR 96), held in Kuala Lumpur
from 10-12 December 1996. It provides an assessment of microfinance in the Pacific island
countries (PICs). It is based partly on an overall review of microfinance in nine
countries in the region, namely Cook Islands, Fiji, Kiribati, Papua New Guinea (PNG),
Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu and Western Samoa.

In addition, more
detailed case studies were undertaken of five major microfinance programs in the region.
These were:
Liklik Dinau Abitore
Trust in PNG;
the PNG Womens
Credit Project;
the Womens
Economic and Social Development Programme (WOSED) in Fiji;
the rural credit
union movement in Solomon Islands; and
the outer islands
credit project of the Tonga Development Bank.
Background to the
PICs
Most of the PICs are
currently emphasising private sector development. Moreover, despite the lack of official
recognition, there is evidence of significant poverty in the region. Microfinance has a
potentially important role to play, both in encouraging cash-generating activities in the
informal sector of the economy, and in poverty alleviation.
However, there are a
number of constraints to sustainable microfinance in the PICs, including low and highly
dispersed populations, the lack of transport and communications infrastructure in many
areas, and the continuing importance of the non-monetised subsistence economy in many
countries.
Current access to
financial services
There has been an
increase in the number of microfinance programs in the PICs in recent years, with the most
common programs being development bank schemes, revolving funds, credit unions, and most
recently Grameen replications.
However, most of
these schemes have been unsuccessful, or are still at a very early stage of development.
In the larger countries in the region in particular, microfinance schemes have very
limited outreach, and most disadvantaged people and people in rural areas have little
access to financial services.
Performance and
capacity of microfinance programs
Outreach to the
disadvantaged
While there is a need
for a dramatic increase in the outreach of microfinance, it is important that existing
programs be expanded gradually, at a pace consistent with improvements in institutional
capacity.
With the partial
exception of Liklik Dinau Abitore Trust, the major microfinance programs in the Pacific do
not focus strongly on targeting the most disadvantaged borrowers. Microfinance programs
should establish effective means tests to ensure that they target the most disadvantaged
people in the community, and refine their strategies for reaching such people.
The so-called
minimalist model, which holds that it is not necessary to provide general
technical and business training to borrowers, is inappropriate in the Pacific. Programs
should provide business and technical training for their clients, or coordinate their
activities with other programs that provide such training.
Savings facilities
are at least as important as loan facilities. All programs should require compulsory
saving as a precondition for borrowing, and should provide voluntary savings facilities,
with voluntary savings able to be withdrawn on call.
Viability and
sustainability
There are a number of
major and unavoidable impediments which work against microfinance programs achieving
self-sufficiency in the Pacific. These include high cost structures, shortages of
qualified workers, low population density and remoteness, and difficulties in achieving
high repayment rates. The indicative timetables for achieving self-sufficiency
in the Guiding Principles agreed by donor agencies (three to seven years for operational
self-sufficiency, five to ten years for financial self-sufficiency) are unrealistic in the
Pacific.
All programs are
currently operating at low levels of self-sufficiency. While this partly reflects the fact
that they are relatively new, all programs should develop strategies to improve their
operational and financial self-sufficiency.
Apart from Liklik
Dinau Abitore Trust with an effective interest rate of 29.4 per cent per year, programs in
the Pacific generally have effective interest rates between 8 and 13 per cent. These are
far too low for sustainability, and should be increased substantially. This need not
require large increases in nominal interest rates.
Programs tend to have
small numbers of borrowers spread over large areas, significantly increasing unit costs.
Programs should establish themselves far more intensively with more borrowers in smaller
areas. Ideally, programs should restrict themselves to a small number of districts. Within
districts, programs should establish themselves intensively in a small number of
contiguous villages.
While repayment rates
for most of the programs included in this study are relatively high by Pacific standards,
they are low by most standards. Programs should continuously monitor their repayment
rates, and should adhere to the key features of the Grameen Bank model, such as compulsory
savings requirements, group guarantees, and intensive training and motivation of
borrowers, as much as possible.
Financial management
and reporting requires considerable improvement. All programs should regularly produce at
least the minimum reporting information set out in the Guiding Principles agreed by donor
agencies.
Program management is
a critical issue. It is important that managers have much greater exposure to core
concepts of microfinance provision and international best practice if programs are to be
developed systematically to maximise outreach on a sustainable basis.
Programs should focus
on training as an integral component of addressing issues such as lending policies and
procedures, means testing, financial management, and information systems.
Resource
mobilisation
As noted above it
will be difficult for microfinance programs to achieve self-sufficiency, and they may need
access to funds from donor agencies and governments for a considerable period of time.
Donors and governments should be realistic about the time frames necessary for programs to
reach sustainability, and should be prepared to make long term commitments to fund them.
Funding will be necessary for administrative expenses, institutional strengthening and
loanable funds.
Programs should work
towards accessing commercial funds, from commercial banks or other sources, over the
medium term.
Policy and macro
factors
Those programs that
have not already done so should establish independent governance structures as soon as
possible. This is likely to reduce the scope for political interference and increase
flexibility.
Governments and
central banks should consider how they can best support the development of microfinance
and rural financial services on a sustainable basis. This includes developing overall
strategies for the provision of financial services to disadvantaged people, and
establishing supportive arrangements for monitoring and supervising microfinance programs.
Small grants schemes
should only be available to community groups for genuine community projects. Donor
agencies and governments should not provide grants to individuals, or for
income-generating projects. They should not support small loan schemes unless they are
established on a rigorous basis with mechanisms to ensure high repayment rates.
Institutional
strengthening and capacity building
Microfinance programs
require technical assistance in a variety of areas. These include training staff and
clients, improving lending policies and procedures, developing effective means tests to
target disadvantaged people, developing strategies for improving self-sufficiency,
improving financial management, developing effective financial and management information
systems, and establishing effective and independent governance structures.
Governments and
central banks may also require technical assistance for developing the overall policy
framework for microfinance.
Donor agencies and
governments supporting microfinance programs should incorporate assistance for
institutional strengthening in all microfinance projects.
In addition, donor
agencies should consider flexible, cost effective ways of supporting capacity building,
such as funding national workshops on microfinance, establishing a small unit for
providing short term technical assistance, and establishing a South Pacific regional
training program.
Alternative
models of microfinance
It is unlikely that one
model of microfinance would be appropriate throughout the Pacific, given differences in
population density, infrastructure, existing institutional arrangements, and other
factors.
Grameen replications
have a number of advantages over other models, but are expensive. They are most likely to
be feasible in those areas with relatively large populations and population densities, and
reasonable infrastructure. Where the Grameen model is used, it would seem appropriate to
follow it as closely as possible unless there are strong reasons for modifying it.
The structure of
development banks makes it difficult for them to reach the most disadvantaged borrowers,
while the use of traditional banking practices designed for much larger loans leads to
high transaction costs. If development banks are to engage in microfinance, they should
consider innovative approaches to lending, such as lending through local communities, NGOs
and self-help groups. Such groups will need capacity-building assistance for this purpose.
Credit unions are
likely to be particularly appropriate in more isolated communities and on small islands,
where intensive monitoring and supervision of borrowers is not feasible. They have a
number of attractive features as microfinance institutions. To fully realise their
potential, however, they will need to establish specific programs or targets for providing
services to disadvantaged people, and allow members to borrow sufficient sums for
income-generating activities.
As a general rule,
revolving funds are likely to be less effective than credit unions. However, they are most
likely to operate successfully where they impose a savings requirement before people are
eligible to borrow, where there is an effective apex body to provide training, and
monitoring and supervision, and where there is a means test to ensure they benefit the
genuinely disadvantaged.
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