Unit 1 Introduction MFRB
Unit 1 Introduction MFRB
Unit 1 Introduction MFRB
Rural Banking
BBM 7th semester
NCC- Kathmandu, Nepal
Course Objectives and Course Description
Course Objectives
Familiarize with the basic concept of microfinance, historical background,
products designing, operational procedures, infrastructure development for
micro finance, legal framework and prudential regulation with specific
reference to the Nepalese context; Provide knowledge of micro finance
practices in Nepal along with global development in microfinance sector, To
make able to understand the role of rural microfinance in poverty reduction
and give practical knowledge on microfinance practices.
Course Description
This course contains Introduction to Micro Finance, Approaches to Micro-
finance, Micro Finance Institutions, Product of Micro Finance, Directed or
Deprived Sector lending, Measuring the Performance of MFIs, Matter of
MFIs.
Course Details
Unit 1: Introduction to Micro Finance LH 5
Concept, Definition and principles of microfinance, Characteristics and importance of Microfinance, Historical
Background, Role of microfinance for elevation of poverty, Linkages between main stream financial services &
micro-finance
Unit 2: Approaches to Micro-finance LH 6
Saving led and credit led, Practices and different models (Special reference to Nepal) Grameen replication, Co-
operative, FINGO and Self Help Groups (SHG), Strengths and weaknesses of the various approaches, Social
Banking VS Commercial Banking, Financial access Vs Financial inclusion.
Unit 3: Micro Finance Institutions LH 5
Ownership and Legal Form of MFIs, Objectives of MFIs, The importance of institutions, Organizational
structure, Governance, Types of financial institutions, Offering microfinance services, Capital structure
Management structure, growth and transformation.
Unit 4: Product of Micro Finance LH 8
Saving product- Concept of saving, saving mobilization, Types of saving, compulsory saving, voluntary saving,
Non-financial services, Micro insurance, Pricing of saving product. Credit product: micro credit, individual
credit, Character and cash-flow based lending, Micro enterprises loan,Working capital loan, agricultural loan,
Loan against group guarantee, interest rate and services charges on micro credit,
Unit 5: Directed or Deprived Sector lending LH 6
Meaning and concept, Directed lending- importance, Pros and cons views, Priority sector lending vs. deprived
sector lending, NRB policies for DSL, Penalty in case of default in DSL, Direct lending Vs Indirect lending. Roles
of DSL for increasing productivity.
Course Details
Unit 6: Measuring the Performance of MFIs LH 8
Analyzing financial statements, Financial performance ratios, efficiency and productivity; liquidity and capital adequacy; asset and
liability management, Loan loss and provisioning, Benchmarking ,Rating MFIs, Social Performance Measurement and Impact
performance evaluation of microfinance institutions in the framework of WOCCU model, CGAP model, and SEEP model
Unit 7: Matter of MFIs LH 10
Viability, Efficiency, Sustainability, Self-reliance, Outreach Cooperation, coordination and co-financing with various donors agencies.
The role of governments in microfinance; national microfinance policies, Subsidizing, The Role of Subsidies and Donors, Measuring
subsidy dependence, Traditional microfinance donors and instruments, socially responsible investors Vs commercial investors: Equity
vs. debt financing options, Microfinance investment funds vs Microfinance investment vehicles, Culture of labor division,
Opportunities and challenges of MFIs in Nepal.
Reference
Christen R.P ( 2007). Banking Services for the Poor: Managing for Financial Success, Accion International, Washington DC
Joanna Ledgerwood. 2001. Microfinance Handbook: An Institutional and Financial Perspective:
Sustainable Banking with Poor. Washington D.C: The World Bank.
Rama Bashyal. MICRO FINANCE. Access to Finance for Nepal’s Rural Poor. Institute for Integrated Development Studies, IIDS. 2008.
SBP Micro- Finance Handbook. The World Bank 1997
Simkhada NR, Sharma N, Upreti T (2002) Review for Micro-finance Services in the hills of Nepal.
Centre for Micro-Finance(CMF), Kathmandu, Nepal
Uprety, T.P. (2005), Micro-finance in Nepal, Impact, Opportunities and Challenges, Seminar Paper, Kathmandu, Nepal.
Suggested Reading
Various publication and article published from Nepal Rastra Bank.
Unit 1: Introduction to Micro Finance
Concept of Micro Finance
What is Microfinance?
Finance that is provided to unemployed or low income people or groups.
The provision of small loans (microcredit) to poor people to help them
engage in productive activities or grow very small businesses. The term
may also include a broader range of services, including credit, savings, and
insurance.
Microcredit is the extension of very small loans to those in poverty
designed to spur entrepreneurship.
Microfinance is a category of financial services targeted at individuals and
small businesses who lack access to conventional banking and related
services. Microfinance services are designed to reach excluded customers,
usually poorer population segments, possibly socially marginalized, or
geographically more isolated, and to help them become self-sufficient.
Concept of Microfinance
Microfinance initially had a limited definition - the provision of
microloans to poor entrepreneurs and small businesses lacking access
to Credit. The two main mechanisms for the delivery of financial
services to such clients were:
(1) relationship-based banking for individual entrepreneurs and small
businesses.
(2) group-based models, where several entrepreneurs come together
to apply for loans and other services as a group.
Over time, microfinance has emerged as a larger movement whose
object is "a world in which as everyone, especially the poor and socially
marginalized people and households have access to a wide range of
affordable, high quality financial products and services, including not
just credit but also savings, insurance, payment services, and fund
transfers.”
Nature of microfinance
For many years microfinance overlapped with microcredit- small loans, often without
traditional guarantees, aimed at improving the lives of clients and their families of
sustaining small- scale economic activities. Traditionally, microfinance is associated with
programes that benefit clients with serious subsistence problems in developing counties.
Nature of microfinance can be outline below;
• Socio-demographic changes over the last few decades have significantly altered the
worked economic scent. For microfinance, the new situation has meant potential new
beneficiaries, new products and a greater involvement of financial intermediaries.
• Exclusion from the traditional financial system, seen as the inability to access basic
financial services, includes millions of people today, both in developing countries and
industrialized countries.
• Traditional poverty thresholds have shifted and new categories of ‘poor’ people have
appeared, even out with developing countries.
• New beneficiaries have brought new financial needs with them. Over the past decade,
new microfinance services have developed alongside microcredit.
• This development has also gained momentum from the observation that structured
financial assistance increased the efficacy of the programmes, while at the same time
improving the level of sustainability.
Evolution of micro-finance
• Microcredit can actually be traced back to the early 1800s when
Jonathon Swift tried to empower families in poverty through the Irish
Loan Fund. While the theory was there, the system was flawed and its
goal of financial independence for the rural population wasn’t
achieved.
• Over a century later, Muhammad Yunus provided a small amount of
his own money to a community in Bangladesh. He was astonished at
how his money was able to rebuild the community. In 1983 he
founded the Grameen (Village) Bank, which created a huge
microcredit industry in Bangladesh.
Growth of micro-finance industry
In 1976, Muhammad Yunus (Nobel Peace Prize Winner 2006) noticed
that small amounts of loans could make a big impact on the poor
peoples’ lives. Grameen Bank, ("Bank of the Villages", in Bangla) was
founded in 1983, was supported by the central bank of Bangladesh.