Case Study
Timor-Leste: Independent Review of the Credit Component of the Community Empowerment Project
Revival of rural economic activity: A result of the Community Empowerment Project's credit component
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38 pages
This review analyzes experiences with the Community Empowerment Project (CEP) credit component, and draws a number of lessons and general principles. The paper presents the following features of CEP:
- Credit contributed to a revival of rural economic activities, re-establishing markets, stimulating production and marketing of food-stuffs and higher value crops;
- CEP's use of credit to achieve post-conflict reconstruction goals had implications for the revival of financial services.
However, the review states that the promotion of credit was not consistent with the immediate needs of post-crisis reconstruction and caused operational difficulties. It also states that there is a need for a transition from intermediated grants to intermediated credit.
Concluding, the review states that CEP reinforces lessons learnt from microcredit elsewhere, and lists the limitations of microcredit in the immediate post-conflict setting:
- Where decision making is divorced from risk, credit allocation is insufficient;
- Subsidized credit undercuts credit delivered by institutions striving towards sustainability;
- The absence of an assurance of follow-up credit is a disincentive to repayment;
- Failure to recycle credit reduces the multiplier effect of economic activity of a given amount of loan capital;
- Microcredit is not adapted to the needs of seasonal agriculture;
- Credit management groups are organic entities forged by training and sustained by mutual obligation, not arbitrary and administratively-convenient assemblages.
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