Paper
The Emerging Market-led Microfinance Agenda
What do the clients need?
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2 pages
This briefing note studies the evolution of the microfinance industry from a supply-led to a market-led industry that matches products with client needs. The paper identifies three issues that enable understanding of the mismatch between available products and client needs:
- Client outreach of microfinance institutions (MFIs);
- The usage patterns of financial services by the poor;
- The ways by which MFIs can increase the poor's access to financial services and increase efficiency in service delivery.
Further, the paper informs that a market-led approach to microfinance focuses on three components:
- The client-product nexus acknowledges that MFIs need to match products to clients' needs, repayment amounts and cycles to clients' cash flow, and loan size to clients' income;
- Linkages between clients and institutions involve creating operational mechanisms to enable the creation and usage of client data to inform product development, marketing or service delivery;
- Analyzing the client's financial landscape helps MFIs understand the formal and informal competition, clients' use of services and their own role within the financial market.
Finally, the paper observes that:
- Market-led microfinance is gradually catching the attention of donors and MFIs alike;
- Large numbers of MFIs are reviewing the integration of client data into management information systems;
- There is a growing recognition of the importance of institutional-client linkages and the client's financial landscape;
- Operational benefits are enabling MFIs to lower service delivery costs, attract new clients and retain existing ones, thus facilitating sustainability.
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