Village Banking

Village Banking

Village Banking is a microcredit methodology developed by FINCA International founder John Hatch. Among US-based non-profit agencies there are at least 31 microfinance institutions (MFIs) that have collectively created over 400 village banking programs in at least 90 countries. And in many of these countries there are host-country MFIs—sometimes dozens—that are village banking practitioners as well.citeweb|url=http://www.haas.berkeley.edu/HaasGlobal/docs/hatch_fincaprimer.doc|title="A Brief Primer on FINCA", a lecture by John Hatch at the University of Berkeley's Haas School of Business, July 21, 2004|accessdate=2007-04-24]

How Village Banking Works

A village bank is an informal self-help support group of 20-30 members, predominantly female heads-of-household. If the program is “on mission”, in a normal village bank about 50% of all new members entering the program will be severely poor—representing families with a daily per-capita expenditure (DPCE) of less than US$1; the rest are moderately poor (DPCE=$1-2/day) or non-poor (DPCE >$2).Fact|date=July 2007 These women meet once a week in the home of one of their members to avail themselves of working capital loans, a safe place to save, skill training, mentoring, and motivation. Loans normally start at $50-$100 and are linked to savings such that the more a client saves the more she can borrow. The normal loan period is four months and is repaid in 16 weekly installments. At the end of 2006, 95% of clients covered by a benchmark sample of 71 NGOs and institutions engaged in village bank lending were women. ["MicroBanking Bulletin", Issue 15, MIX, Washington, August 2007, p. 47]

To eliminate the need for collateral (the poor man's obstacle to receiving bank loans), village banks rely on a variation of the solidarity lending methodology. It relies on on a system of cross-guarantees, where each member of a village bank ensures the loan of every other member. This system gives rise to an atmosphere of social pressure within the village bank, where the cost of social embarrassment motivates bank members to repay their loans in full. The admixture of cross-guarantees and social pressure makes it possible for even the poorest people to receive loans. This method has proven very effective for FINCA, yielding a repayment rate of over 97% in its worldwide network. Village banks are highly democratic, self-managed, grassroots organizations. They elect their own leaders, select their own members, create their own bylaws, do their own bookkeeping, manage all funds, disburse and deposit all funds, resolve loan delinquency problems, and levy their own fines on members who come late, miss meetings, or fall behind in their payments.

There was some hope in the early years of village bank development that these small village organizations could become independent and self-financing, but this hope was later abandoned. Most village banks in operation today are directly supervised by the staff of a local NGO or microfinance institution, from which their receive much of their loan financing.

ources of Funds

Market interest rates apply to village bank loans. At the end of 2006, the average portfolio yield for a sample 71 microfinance institutions engaged in village banking was 27.7%, after removing the effect of local inflation. ["MicroBanking Bulletin", Issue 15, MIX, Washington, August 2007, p. 48] The village bank itself will usually mark up this rate when it on-lends to individual members. While these rates seem high, they are low compared to those charged by local moneylenders in most countries. Unlike rural banks and credit unions these microfinance institutions do not provide savings services directly to their clients.

The capital for the loans is provided by FINCA with on-time weekly installment repayments collectively guaranteed by all members—i.e., a shortfall by one member must be covered by other group members. This joint liability form of microcredit is controversial, with Muhammad Yunus (for example) rejecting formal systems of joint liability in Grameen Bank's solidarity groups.

About FINCA

Worldwide FINCA’s 21 affiliates have about 3,300 staff, of which about 2,600 are field staff (credit officers and supervisors), and among these many are the better-educated children of FINCA clients. Each credit officer (CO) attends the weekly meeting of each of her 10-15 village banks to coach its leadership committee and monitor the bank’s activities. In addition to motivation and adult education, the CO supervises client attendance, monitors bookkeeping accuracy, checks the accuracy of the current week’s loan and savings collections, and checks when the deposit receipt of the previous meeting. In turn, each village bank is managed by its elected officers—a president (who leads the bank’s democratic decision-making process), secretary (who takes attendance and keeps minutes) and a treasurer (responsible for accurately handling all cash transactions). Finally, each village banker has her own passbook, and her recorded balances of loan payments and savings deposits must always be the same as those recorded in the treasurer’s record for each client.

References

ee also

* CVECA
* FINCA Afghanistan
* FINCA International
* John Hatch
* microcredit
* microfinance
* ROSCA
* self-help group
* solidarity lending

External links

* [http://villagbanking.org/ FINCA's Official Website]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Village Pantry — was founded as a convenience store chain division of Marsh Supermarkets, founded in Yorktown, Indiana, and currently headquartered in Indianapolis. Village Pantry sells Marathon branded fuels, and have 148 convenience stores as of 2007. [… …   Wikipedia

  • Banking in the People's Republic of China — This article is about the banking system of the People s Republic of China. For details on the financial system at large, see Chinese financial system. China s banking system has undergone significant changes in the last two decades: banks are… …   Wikipedia

  • BANKING AND BANKERS — Antiquity There is little likelihood that financial transactions played a prominent role in the pre Exilic epoch in Ereẓ Israel; according to the ethos of Jewish society, then founded on a pronounced agrarian structure, lending was part of the… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Banking in China — China s banking system has undergone significant changes in the last two decades: banks are now functioning more like banks than before. Nevertheless, China s banking industry has remained in the government s hands even though banks have gained… …   Wikipedia

  • Chemical Banking — Infobox Defunct Company company name = Chemical Banking Corporation company slogan = fate = Acquired Chase Manhattan and assumed the name Chase. successor = Chase foundation = 1823 defunct = 1996 location = New York City industry = Bank holding… …   Wikipedia

  • Morris Canal and Banking Company — The New Jersey Legislature chartered the Morris Canal and Banking Company on December 31, 1824, as a private corporation for the purpose of building the Morris Canal. History The idea for constructing the canal is credited to Morristown… …   Wikipedia

  • Holland Village, Singapore — SG neighbourhood image englishname=Holland Village chinesename=荷兰村 pinyin=Héláncūn malayname=fill in tamilname= fill in Holland Village is a small commercial enclave near the Buona Vista MRT Station close to the Queenstown area in Singapore. A… …   Wikipedia

  • Southern Village, North Carolina — Southern Village is a convert|312|acre|km2|1|sing=on New Urbanism neighborhood located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Established in 1994, Southern Village includes 550 single family homes, 375 townhomes and condominiums, 250 apartments, and… …   Wikipedia

  • Township and Village Enterprises — (TVEs) are market oriented public enterprises under the purview of local governments based in townships and villages in the People s Republic of China. They initially built on commune and brigade run industries that had been set up to serve the… …   Wikipedia

  • FINCA International — Infobox Company company name = FINCA International company company type = Nonprofit Organization foundation = 1984 location = flagicon|USA Washington, DC origins = key people = John Hatch area served = industry = products = Financial Services… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”