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The CBSL is taking steps to reform the financial sector. Big micro finance players have been encouraged to convert themselves to finance companies, so that they come within a regulated environment, this includes Sarvodaya Seeds, Seva Lanka Finance and Grameen Sri Lanka.
After liberally issuing licenses for new finance companies, the regulators now are trying to ‘consolidate’ them, reducing the number from the present around 58 to 20. Banks and finance companies will be ‘encouraged’ to acquire one to three smaller firms. This includes nonperforming finance companies taken over and to which various types of lackeys were appointed to run them.
The bazaar talk about one worthy is that, other than his parents, all other relatives are working for one financial service provider or another! The State-controlled banks, perennial forcible rescuer of disastrously performing para-statal enterprises is, it is alleged, being forced to intervene again! This master plan for consolidation of the financial sector is in the process of being unveiled.
It has been estimated that as much as 40% of finance for asweddumisation of paddy lands is generated through pawning family jewels. In a country which has over a century’s history of rural credit schemes, this is a disgrace. The financial services sector has failed to come up with a financial instrument to service the largest demand for rural credit. This and related tasks by and large has been left to the money lenders, pawnbrokers and the micro finance sector.
In Sri Lanka today, the bulk of micro finance activity is in the non commercial banking sector. The Co-operative Rural Banks and Sanasa have a history of over 100 years in the sector. Sarvodaya Seeds and its successor Deshodaya Finance, the National Youth Savings and Credit Cooperative (NYSCO), have over a quarter century’s experience.
More recent interventions such as the Sewa Lanka Finance, Janashakthi Banku Sangamaya of the Women’s Development Federation, Hambantota, the Wilpotha Kantha Iturum Parshadaya of Wilpotha, Puttalam, the Batticaloa YMCA, have also built up experience and capacity. The marginalised poor, youth and women have really benefited from these interventions.
The National Development Trust Fund (NDTF, formerly the Janasaviya Trust Fund [JTF]) has been operating from 1989 and is the biggest provider of wholesale funds for on lending to the MFI sector, including the Regional Development Banks. The JTF credit window is now being operated by the Sri Lanka Savings Bank.
Together with the NGOs in the sector there are huge numbers of organisations, outside the commercial banking sector, involved in MF in Sri Lanka today. When the State’s Divi Neguma banks are taken into consideration, the numbers will increase exponentially. However there is a legal interpretation issue as to whether by statutory definition Divi Neguma can lawfully operate in rural agricultural and fishery communities.
The MFI’s Apex Organisation the Lanka Micro Finance Practitioners Association has been playing a role in trying to create a culture of self regulation among the MFIs as has been reportedly successfully done in some parts of India, Timor-Leste and Uganda.
Impressive outreach
A recent CGAP (Consultative Group to Assist the Poor – of the World Bank) survey stated that microfinance in Sri Lanka had achieved an impressive outreach, with more that 15 million deposit accounts and two million outstanding micro loans in 2004, this from a population of 20 million people.
A Sri Lanka Country Level Effectiveness and Accountability Review (CLEAR) by CGAP, which took place in 2005, revealed that a ‘handful of promising institutions that offer a wide range of services has emerged. However, many microfinance providers are not committed to transparency, thereby contributing to the fragile nature of the sector and weaknesses, such as substandard portfolio management and financial sustainability, poor level of microfinance specialisation, and widespread public sector involvement in credit delivery.’
All these issues have solutions, mostly which could be addressed by the MFIs themselves, by self regulation, except the one of ‘public sector involvement’.
Politicisation
Sri Lanka’s experience shows that State involvement means politicisation.
In the guise of protecting poor depositors if the State steps in to regulate the MFI sector, the resultant politicisation will be a death warrant. However, a draft Micro Finance Regulation Bill has been prepared and is pending enactment for an inordinate amount of time.
Self regulation by the MFIs themselves is a much preferred option. In any event, the fact is there is a regulatory process in place, first the market itself, with so many lenders, the borrowers have a clear choice, and there are a plethora of laws, which give the State immense supervisory power over the sector, ranging from the Cooperative Act, the Monetary Act, the Voluntary Social Service Organisations Act, the Companies Act to the Divi Neguma Act, to name only a few. We do not need new legislation, just proper implementation of the existing legal regime, in other words, improved governance.
Operational issues abound; the Institute of Policy Studies recently did a study on Samurdhi and found that 43% of the real poor are not receiving the program’s benefits, whereas 40% of the beneficiaries that get benefits are not the targeted poor.
Further, the Vinstar Report of October 2000 reported that the Samurdhi Banku Sangam must be counted as one of the most expensive large MFIs in the world. The operating cost (excluding cost of funds) of an average performing SBS is around 73% of its average gross loans outstanding! Grameen in Bangladesh is only 9%!
Mor Committee report
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) recently released the report of the Committee on Comprehensive Financial Services for Small Businesses and Low Income Households, which was chaired by Nachiket Mor, a board member of the RBI, which was tasked with framing a clear and detailed vision for financial inclusion and financial deepening in India.
The Mor Committee outlined vision statements to achieve this goal: