Case Study
Twenty Years of Microfinance Work and Future Challenges
Proceedings from the Inter-American Development Bank's 5th International Forum on microenterprise
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14 pages
This presentation addresses ACCION Internationals microfinance history over the past twenty years. It:
- Describes the four major stages of evolution;
- Highlights the main outcomes in each stage;
- Identifies the most significant mistakes or shortcomings in each stage;
- The presentation identifies the following two guiding principles of ACCION:
- To reach a massive number of the economically active poor with credit;
- To build sustainable local, autonomous institutions that provide credit.
- It describes the four stages of evolution as follows:Stage one (early 1980s):
- Development of solidarity-groups lending methodology;
- Increased role of non-government organizations (NGOs);
- Shortcomings: Lack of funds and skilled staff.
- Stage two (1985-1990):
- Creation of new NGOs;
- Shift from donor-funded portfolios to commercial loans;
- Links between ACCION affiliates and local capital markets;
- Financial self-sufficiency;
- Specialization, impact evaluation, documentation and dissemination;
- Shortcomings: Lack of financial skills, application of standardized definitions and governance.
- Stage three (1990-1995):
- Achievement of massive scale;
- Transformation of NGOs into regulated financial institutions;
- Shortcomings:
- Lack of a strong technical team;
- Weak regulatory and supervisory environment.
- Stage four (1996 onwards):
- Support to commercial banks;
- New products and technologies;
- Competition;
- Increase in scale, efficiency and financial viability.
- The presentation concludes by listing the future challenges and highlighting the continuity of vision within ACCION and among ACCION affiliates.
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