Case Study
Donor Innovation in Financial System Development: DFID's Design of FinMark Trust in South Africa
How did DFID's design expand the outreach of the financial system in South Africa?
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In order to create better financial systems for the poor in South Africa, DFID and the Banking Council of South Africa (BCSA) created FinMark Trust, a local organization:
- The Trust was legally allowed to begin projects that helped integrate microfinance into mainstream financial services;
- FinMark Trust is both a technical assistance and finance provider for strategic projects.
FinMark Trust was only established in 2002, and its significance is borne out of its structure, flexibility, and financing. A change in focus for DFID allowed FinMark Trust to be established:
- DFID realized that limited access to financial services hindered the growth of small enterprises. It, therefore, began a new approach, concentrating on factors that constrained the growth of microfinance;
- DFID's focus shifted from supporting individual projects to focusing on high-level policy projects. Policies were aimed at issues such as infrastructure, supporting legislation, local technical capacity.
The structure of FinMark Trust is the following:
- FinMark's mission is to ensure that it provides demand-driven financial services to the poor;
- It attracts private-sector funding by developing institutional, organizational, and support infrastructure. It has the ability to focus on all three of these areas simultaneously;
- It received a GBP £5 million grant from DFID. Various other donors collaborate with FinMark on an individual basis. The Trust is not expected to become self-sustainable, but to help create a sustainable financial services sector;
- Superior local people were recruited for staffing.
FinMark has been relatively successful in its first few years of operations due to:
- Partnering with local institutions;
- Focusing on good microfinance practice;
- Creating flexible funding mechanisms.
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