Paper
Working With Savings & Credit Cooperatives
What do donors need to remember in promoting savings and credit cooperatives?
2 pages
This paper serves as a pointer for the donors promoting savings and credit cooperatives (SACCOs). It lists the advantages that SACCOs offer for increasing microfinance outreach by:
- Reaching clients and areas under-served/ not served by banks;
- Providing savings services to their members, unlike most microfinance institutions (MFIs);
- Having a local origin;
- Not relying much on external support;
- Having a stable, low-cost funding source of small savings accounts;
- Exhibiting low administrative costs;
- Offering loans at lower interest rates than those charged by other microcredit providers.
Further, the challenges faced by SACCOs include:
- A weak governance mechanism;
- Inadequate regulation and supervision;
- Limited menu of products that are inflexible to meet the diverse credit needs of the members;
- Damage done by external credit.
Finally, it suggests that in order to strengthen SACCOs, donors should:
- Focus on deposit mobilization;
- Invest in capacity building, instead of injecting external funds for lending;
- Encourage sound governance policies, even when these are not mandatory under the law;
- Offer support for learning new techniques to reach poorer customers;
- Keep financial standards at the core of internal management and external supervision;
- Support competent, independent external supervision by banking authorities, where possible;
- Concentrate resources on cooperatives willing to implement sound policies and standards, rather than spreading them over all the cooperatives in a country.
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