Monday, October 18, 2010

The Micro Finance Muddle

A spate of suicides in Andhra Pradesh, which accounts for over a third of the micro finance business in India, has seen the state government pass stringent regulations to control these institutions. The micro finance institutions (MFIs) have played an important role in fulfilling the credit requirements of the rural folk, who have limited access to organised bank finance even today. Most MFIs started as service oriented NGOs but have assumed a commercial role over a period of time.

While the Reserve Bank of India is eager to get credit to the poor and encourages banks to lend to microfinance institutions, it has not permitted them to raise deposits. Indian microfinance lenders generally charge between 24 percent and 36 percent annual interest. It is more or less on the lines of the interest rates charged by unorganised money lenders or the more sophisticated credit card companies. Banks have their own interest in extending credit to MFIs, to fulfill their agricultural lending targets.

Questions are now being raised about the functioning of MFIs. Some analysts also compare the MFI story to the sub prime crises in the US. RBI has also started an enquiry into the affairs of MFIs on a selective basis. There is definitely a need to regulate the MFIs, without killing the model that they adopt. The problem area could be multiple financing in certain pockets which could escalate into a bubble. But we must not forget that these institutions by and large enjoy an excellent recovery rate of 95-100%. The regulators will have to segregate the hay from the chef, rather than cast a shadow on the functioning of the entire MFI sector.

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