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  • Advancing Financial Inclusion for the Forcibly Displaced: A Collective Imperative

    Author: Ed Fraser. On March 14, e-MFP was pleased to open applications for the European Microfinance Award (EMA) 2024 , which is on ‘Advancing Financial Inclusion for Refugees and Forcibly Displaced People’. This is the 15th edition of the Award, which was launched in 2005 by the Luxembourg Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs — Directorate for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Affairs, and which is jointly organised by the Ministry, e-MFP, and the Inclusive Finance Network Luxembourg ( InFiNe.lu ), in cooperation with the European Investment Bank. Kicking off e-MFP’s annual series of guest blogs on this topic, Ed Fraser, a consultant supporting the EMA team, describes the scale and complexity of the displacement challenge, the barriers faced by the forcibly displaced, and introduces the role(s) that the financial inclusion sector can play, and argues for a collective approach, an ‘imperative’, that leverages what various stakeholder groups can offer in serving these groups. Each year, growing numbers of people are forced to leave their homes. Most are internally displaced within their country, but many others cross international borders in search of asylum. In the process, they face inordinate risks and inevitable challenges in meeting even the most basic of human needs. To make matters worse, they are often excluded from accessing social, economic and other systems that might otherwise enable survival, recovery and durable solutions. This includes financial systems, as forcibly displaced people consistently lack access to useful and affordable financial products and services that meet their needs, delivered in a responsible and sustainable way. Redressing this systemic exclusion is not just a matter of priority for all key stakeholders, but a collective imperative. Scale and complexity of forced displacement Forced displacement is a growing global phenomenon, with the latest UNHCR Global Trends report , published in June 2023, indicating that 108.4 million people worldwide were estimated to be forcibly displaced because of persecution, conflict, violence, human rights violations and events seriously disturbing public order. This figure is predicted to increase due to a proliferation of various root causes of displacement. In addition, displacement is typically now more protracted and complex in nature, for example often involving multiple movements both internal and external to the country of origin. While the prevailing narrative surrounding refugees is people making dangerous crossings to Europe or the US, the majority of displaced people remain in their countries of origin as Internally Displaced People (IDPs), or cross to neighbouring countries as refugees. As a result, most of the global refugee and IDP population remains in low- and middle-income countries typically, though not exclusively, in displacement camps or urban and peri-urban areas. Forced displacement of this nature and extent acts to impede the achievement of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and other well-established commitments in respect of human rights, protection, assistance and development, not least those established via the Global Compact on Refugees and respective Global Refugee Forums. The role of financial inclusion Financial inclusion of refugees and other FDPs is a vital part of a necessarily holistic and collaborative response to the challenges posed by forced displacement at respective individual, community, national and global levels. Effective and sustained financial inclusion supports survival and coping in the immediate wake of displacement, as well as building self-reliance and resilience in support of longer-term recovery, empowerment and transformation. Whether enabling maximisation of skills and competencies through restoration of decent livelihoods, encouraging net contribution to local economies or facilitating voluntary, informed return or resettlement, financial inclusion constitutes an essential pillar of a dignified life for people affected by displacement. In this vein, it is right to advocate for equality in inclusion of Forcibly Displaced People (FDPs) in local financial systems , such that they benefit equally from sustainable access to those same financial products and services offered to local or so-called host communities. Alternatively, the unique spectrum of needs, preferences and vulnerabilities experienced by FDPs often require at least adaptation, if not creation anew, of financial products and services. Similarly, refugees and other FDPs face unique, typically higher and undeniably systemic barriers to achieving safe and sustainable financial inclusion. As such, beyond adaptation or creation, impactful solutions must seek to redress such barriers through use, support and change of local financial systems such that they more consistently accommodate FDPs and cater to their unique needs, preferences, and vulnerabilities. Key factors & challenges FDPs have complex financial and non-financial needs which vary according to a range of factors, not least the phase of displacement and specifics of the context in which they reside. However, they experience a range of individual or demand-side barriers to fulfilling their needs, such as: lacking linguistic skills, financial literacy or awareness of available services which, for example, limits their ability to demonstrate that they are a secure and potentially profitable clients for Financial Service Providers (FSPs) and others; an absence of legal status, identification or business registration for legal compliance (e.g. with Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements); a lack of financial track record or viable collateral assets for credit or loans; movement restrictions or absence of digital means or connectivity in order to access otherwise available solutions; or insufficient purchasing power to afford associated costs. As pressing as these challenges are, however, it is imperative to also consider supply-side and broader systemic barriers if responses are to support more formal, durable solutions. From a supply-side perspective , there are many challenges, but they include a lack of knowledge, familiarity or in-depth understanding on the part of FSPs of FDPs as a potential client base; lacking willingness or ability of FSPs to develop affordable products adapted to the unique needs, preferences and risks of FDPs; adaptation or creation being based on simplistic assumptions and (mis)perceptions which limit effectiveness of otherwise well-intentioned initiatives; or stringent consumer identification rules that inherently exclude FDPs. From a systemic perspective , FDPs are often disadvantaged, intentionally or otherwise, by impractical, untested, unsustainable and exclusionary policy, regulation, risk assessment and strategy. In particular, KYC legislation frequently acts to exclude FDPs who either lack proof of ID to fulfil stringent KYC requirements. This is without even mentioning the stigmatisation and outright hostility FDPs often confront from host communities, FSPs and political actors alike, or the insufficiency of support services and infrastructure to allow truly equitable inclusion. Solutions: Who’s Responsible for Doing What? There is a role to be played by all key stakeholders in advancing financial inclusion of FDPs , not least the Private Sector, including traditional FSPs or emerging FinTech companies, but also the Public Sector, notably national governments, civil society actors, including Non-Government Organisations from global to local levels, and others, like related networks or communities of practice. This recognises that the enhancement of financial inclusion for FDPs constitutes a collective imperative. It is vital to also consider FDPs and the communities that host them as participating stakeholders, as opposed to passive actors or recipients. In doing so, it is important to recognise that not all FDPs, even those with comparable experiences of displacement, are the same in terms of needs, preferences and vulnerabilities. For example, forcibly displaced women face intersecting barriers related to their displacement status and gender that drive financial exclusion, including restricted access to livelihoods, legal status, safety risks, and discriminatory social norms. As such, pursuing effective, sustainable solutions for FDPs requires nuanced analysis and, in turn, the participatory design and implementation of bespoke approaches. With this in mind, it is crucial that any solutions aiming to enhance financial inclusion for FDPs: Favour formality, but recognise the necessity or preference for informality by FDPs, thus adapting to evolving needs and vulnerabilities of different displacement phases and contexts; Respect principles of participation by soliciting and responding to FDPs’ views and preferences , being sure to mainstream protection principles and manage protection risks; Appreciate that effective solutions are not limited to the realm of innovative FinTech, but may include more basic, context-appropriate solutions from actors across the system ; Clearly define and measure intended impact , considering broader measures of financial health and wellbeing, not solely access to functional financial market systems; and Determine the most feasible, relevant and appropriate means to understand, avoid harming and, ultimately, support or change local financial systems via more facilitative approaches. I am honoured to be supporting this year’s Award process and look forward to seeing the range of institutions and initiatives that show what financial inclusion organisations can - and currently - do to help displaced groups build resilience, restore livelihoods, and live with dignity in host communities. In order to reply to any questions that applicant organisations may have when applying to the Award, there are three Application Guidance sessions : an English session held March 25th (see recording here ); a French session held also on March 25th (see recording here ); and a Spanish session on April 3rd (register here ) About the Author: Ed Fraser is a collaborative humanitarian consultant with a particular focus on the economic recovery of displacement affected people. He is supporting the e-MFP team on the design, development and evaluation process for the European Microfinance Award 2024

  • Role of Community in Strengthening Financial Health of Refugees and Forcibly Displaced

    Author: Swati M. Dhawan. On March 14, e-MFP was pleased to launch the European Microfinance Award (EMA) 2024 , which is on ‘Advancing Financial Inclusion for Refugees and Forcibly Displaced People’. This is the 16th edition of the Award, which was launched in 2005 by the Luxembourg Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs — Directorate for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Affairs, and which is jointly organised by the Ministry, e-MFP, and the Inclusive Finance Network Luxembourg), in cooperation with the European Investment Bank. In the second of e-MFP’s annual series of guest blogs on this topic, Swati Mehta Dhawan discusses the importance of integrating a financial health lens into strategies to advance financial inclusion of FDPs, and the role that community networks play in achieving this. To mark World Refugee Day in June last year, I wrote a blog that emphasised integrating a financial health lens into our strategies to address the challenge of financial exclusion among refugees. It has been a few years since the foundational research, which was called Finance in Displacement (FIND) and which informed both that blog and this one too. However, as refugees continue to remain in protracted displacement in developing host countries without durable solutions, we see that many of the findings remain pertinent: Between 2019 and 2020, we tracked the financial trajectories of more than 170 refugees across a span of 12 to 18 months in Kenya and Jordan . The high-level findings produced were informed by similar research in diverse contexts including – Uganda, Columbia, Mexico, and even developed countries such as the United States and Germany . The lead researchers continue to document new insights from across the world on the Journey’s project website of the Fletcher School.   This blog seeks to delve deeper into these findings, focusing on the pivotal role of community-led approaches in enhancing the financial well-being of refugees and forcibly displaced people (FDPs). The critical role of community networks In the intricate web of challenges that FDPs navigate, informal social networks and community-driven organisations (CDOs) stand out as fundamental pillars of support. Initially, family and kinship networks (bonding social capital) provide indispensable support to refugees and FDPs. However, these connections can weaken over time due to migration, loss, and the ongoing pressures of displacement. As these networks erode, refugees often find themselves without the internal community support that once played a critical role in their lives, leaving them increasingly vulnerable. Simultaneously, building new networks with the host community (bridging social capital) is invaluable during different phases of displacement. These connections are crucial for finding housing and work opportunities, developing skills, accessing capital, building businesses, and sharing risks. For instance, in Kenya, refugees were unable to access M-Pesa, a critical financial service, and often borrowed the IDs of Kenyan friends to carry out transactions. Connections with the host community helped refugees and internally displaced people (IDPs) to secure better-paying jobs and the necessary financial capital to start or expand businesses—support that the displaced community alone cannot provide.   However, building these connections is challenging in a low-trust environment where certain groups face greater exclusion. Women and individuals from minority groups are particularly vulnerable, often isolated due to language barriers, cultural expectations, and social stigma. Women who head households face compounded challenges, burdened with the dual responsibilities of caregiving and providing for their family, further restricting their opportunities to engage with both refugee and host communities. In the FIND research, several examples highlighted how these social networks effectively supported managing financial risks. In Jordan, we heard of Yemeni and Somali refugees successfully raising funds for immediate medical needs upon arrival. A Syrian woman crowdsourced US$200 for a medical emergency through 40 members of a faith-based group she attended, while a Somali woman received financial aid facilitated by her local mosque's sheikh to settle debts. We also saw Jordanian small shop owners extending shop credit to refugees and low-income locals, allowing them to purchase essential goods and pay later. Though routine for the shops, this practice played a critical role in ensuring food security by offering unbureaucratic, flexible, and timely financial support . For internally displaced persons (IDPs), their networks are crucial for maintaining a semblance of stability through translocal livelihoods. These livelihoods involve the movement and exchange of goods, money, and information between their places of origin and their current residences. Such networks are vital for managing day-to-day survival and maintaining connections that could facilitate eventual return to their homes. However, these translocal networks are fragile and can be disrupted by factors such as increased security issues or economic downturns, which in turn can exacerbate the isolation and vulnerability of displaced individuals. A key insight from the FIND research was about the role of Community-Driven Organisations (CDOs ), which are grassroots organisations where refugees themselves are members and are able to set the terms for providing support. Unlike traditional support agencies that view individuals as “clients,” CDOs treat their participants as “members,” offering support with dignity and a community focus. Being closer on the ground, they are able to better listen and respond to the ever-changing needs of the heterogeneous group of FDPs they serve through different phases of displacement. These organisations engage in various activities, from providing debt relief and distributing food to offering medical services and educational programs. They provide these services through personalised support, counselling, and mentorship, often in ways that are often more accessible and culturally sensitive than the more formal support institutions, fostering personal connections and bonding over shared experiences of displacement and recovery . Common across all the above examples is support that is rooted in solidarity . Social solidarity is defined as “the glue that keeps people together, whether by mutually identifying and sharing certain norms and values, or by contributing to some common good, or both.” Unlike modern-day humanitarianism characterised by hierarchy and bureaucracy, these solidarity-based support networks assist in a horizontal and anti-bureaucratic manner, emphasising mutual support and collective well-being. Critical questions to address… We know that financial health outcomes are often less about financial resources and more about social resources : the ability to find better-paying jobs, access information about humanitarian and financial systems, seek legal support, and receive psycho-social support. These capabilities hinge significantly on the relationships that FDPs can forge. However, humanitarian programming frequently overlooks the importance of strengthening these essential relationships, underscoring a critical area of focus for humanitarian and development agencies. Looking ahead, several critical questions persist regarding how humanitarian organisations and the private sector, including financial service providers, can enhance their support for FDPs through community support mechanisms: What non-financial interventions might be necessary to strengthen the existing mechanisms of financial support offered by community networks? What insights could service providers gain from the adaptive responses of CDOs to the evolving needs of FDPs? How might they facilitate a greater role for CDOs in improving the financial well-being of FDPs? How could financial services (product design or delivery) be adapted to leverage these community networks? By addressing these questions, we can help ensure that FDPs are not only surviving but thriving in their new communities. Embracing community-led approaches offers a model for humanitarian aid that is not only effective but also dignifying and empowering for all involved. We hope to explore some of these questions during the discussions leading up to the European Microfinance Week in November 2024. Among other thematic streams, as always, this event will spotlight this year’s European Microfinance Award topic on the financial inclusion of refugees and FDPs. ______ Illustrations by Liyou Zewide: No.1 - Ismail, a 29-year-old Somali refugee, volunteers as an English teacher for fellow refugees at a Community Development Organization in Amman, Jordan (2020). No.2 - Farah, a 35-year-old Yemeni refugee, participates in an informal sewing course led by a Jordanian tailor in Amman, Jordan (2020). For more details refer A hope for home: A brief compendium of financial journeys of refugees and asylum seekers in Jordan For biographies from Kenya refer  Refuge?: Refugees’ Stories of Rebuilding their Lives in Kenya The European Microfinance Award 2024 on “Advancing Financial Inclusion for Refugees & Forcibly Displaced People” was launched on March 14th and seeks to highlight organisations active in financial inclusion that help forcibly displaced people build resilience, restore livelihoods, and live with dignity in host communities. The Round 1 application period is now closed and received 49 applications from 26 countries. The multi-stage evaluation process will culminate with the winner of the €100,000 prize (plus the two runners-up, who each win €10,000) being announced during European Microfinance Week in November. About the Author: Swati M. Dhawan is an independent consultant. Her primary focus is on conducting research related to financial inclusion at the intersections of gender, displacement, climate change, and digital transformation. She holds a PhD in Economic Geography and her dissertation was based on the Finance in Displacement research in Jordan. She has previously worked with GIZ and MicroSave Consulting, and was a German Chancellor Fellow in 2017-2018

  • Climate Change is Massively Accelerating Forced Displacement. How Should the Financial Inclusion Sector Respond?

    Author: Deborah Foy. On March 14, e-MFP was pleased to launch the European Microfinance Award (EMA) 2024 , which is on ‘Advancing Financial Inclusion for Refugees and Forcibly Displaced People’. This is the 15th edition of the Award, which was launched in 2005 by the Luxembourg Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs — Directorate for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Affairs, and which is jointly organised by the Ministry, e-MFP, and the Inclusive Finance Network Luxembourg ( InFiNe.lu ), in cooperation with the European Investment Bank. In the third of e-MFP’s annual series of guest blogs on this topic, Deborah Foy, summarising themes from a new Opportunity International paper on the topic, outlines the critical (and growing) role climate change plays as a driver of forced displacement and ways the financial inclusion sector can respond to the challenge. In 1990, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned that the greatest single impact of climate change could be the impact on human migration. Fast forward to 2024, and climate change has become a leading cause of new displacements globally . It is also a ‘threat multiplier’, magnifying the impact of other drivers of displacement such as conflict and violence.   Most of those forced to move are displaced internally, with national governments bearing the primary responsibility for their protection and welfare – nations which typically lack the resources needed for both prevention and response of climate displacement. In the coming years, as the adverse effects of climate change worsen, cross-border movements will become increasingly likely. Against this backdrop, financial inclusion plays a vital role in both preventing climate-induced displacement, by helping communities to be more resilient, and in supporting forcibly displaced populations (FDPs) to rebuild their lives. For not only do the vast majority of the world’s unbanked live in climate-vulnerable economies, but people who have been forced to move within and across borders are often completely shut out of the financial system. Action Needs to be Proactive and Forward-Looking To address the challenges and leverage the opportunities presented by mass climate-induced displacement, those in the financial inclusion sector must ask ourselves: How can we provide meaningful support to mitigate the effects of climate impacts and minimise climate-induced displacement? How can we support those who have been forced to move to rebuild their lives? What are effective solutions that have the potential to address the complex interaction between climate change, financial inclusion, and human mobility? How do we finance and deliver these solutions at the scale required?  Opportunity International sees two key areas of focus, outlined in more detail here : 1. Scale Up Efforts to Prevent Displacement As a sector, we must do more to help communities to be stronger and better prepared to handle disasters, thereby lessening the necessity to move. Inclusive and resilient development that increases the capability of vulnerable nations to adapt could reduce climate-related displacement by as much as 60%. We must also support those who face multiple constraints to mobility, and who simply cannot move – the typically most marginalized and resource-constrained communities. On the one hand, we need to expand climate adaptation efforts. This could include agronomist advice on regenerative agriculture techniques better suited to a changing climate, as well as enabling vulnerable communities to access the resources to implement adaptation measures . On the other hand, we need to accelerate efforts to support disaster-affected people who persist in place – such as keeping agent networks active in a crisis situation to ensure continued access to financial services. In Colombia, for example, Bancamía’s climate vulnerability maps combine publicly available climate prediction data with a geolocation system for clients using ArcGIS. This helps Bancamía to generate climate alerts that both identify the bank’s exposure to weather events such as floods, and help to design mitigation and/or adaptation strategies tailored to the needs of affected clients. More attention should also be focused on addressing protection gaps. These disproportionately affect low income groups, particularly smallholder farmers. Globally, insurers are already over-exposed to climate risk. Unless significant progress is made to innovate and develop new insurance models, Christiana Figueres warns that we risk moving into a world that is ‘systemically uninsurable’ . 2. Support Those Who Have Been Forced to Move Financial inclusion has a major role to play in supporting people who have been forced to move because of slow- and sudden-onset climate hazards. This includes accessing cash (one of the most critical needs when preparing for displacement), as well as the resources and support necessary to help the transition to new livelihoods – particularly for those in situations of protracted displacement. There has been significant progress in this space over the last ten years, much of it due to the UNHCR’s leadership and convening power. Yet exclusion rates of FDPs to the formal financial system remain persistently high. It’s a complicated space – FDPs are socio-economically diverse, with differing levels of vulnerability. Financial service providers typically perceive the risks of serving FDPs to be high. Challenges are compounded by negative cultural perceptions of FDPs, a lack of identification and documents, differing legal frameworks, language barriers, and a lack of data. Existing solutions include simplifying onboarding processes, facilitating access to remittances services , and incorporating psychosocial support for ‘ 'migratory mourning' . No doubt this year’s European Microfinance Award will spotlight best practice and shed more light on new innovations. Opportunity International’s own experience following decades of working with FDPs has taught us this: The humanitarian-development-peace nexus is complicated and requires excellence in partnering with governments, NGOs and humanitarian organisations. We must meaningfully include FDPs in design and decision-making processes, as well as work with refugee-led organisations. We need to leverage digitization in order to amplify opportunities. For example, digital payments and mobile wallets are already shifting how humanitarian aid is distributed. We must work in partnership to address documentation gaps. Encouragingly, some regulators now allow UNHCR-issued IDs to satisfy KYC requirements. A final priority is helping already displaced communities affected by climate change. 60% of FDPs displaced by conflict live in countries on the front line of the climate crisis and are thus at risk of secondary displacement. Noah Ssempijja, Opportunity International’s Refugee Programme Coordinator in Uganda, has seen this first-hand. “ Most refugees here depend on agriculture for survival. But growing conditions for smallholder farmers in the settlements are now almost impossible .” One of the main challenges is that financial inclusion actors typically approach the two critical issues of climate resilience and displacement management separately. Going forward, we need to break down organizational silos and ensure much greater integration. The Window of Opportunity The global conversation on the role of financial inclusion in the context of climate change urgently needs to include the impact on forced displacement. The climate crisis is deeply connected to the movement of people both within and across borders. With a billion people projected to join the ranks of the climate-displaced by 2050 , the window of opportunity for the financial inclusion sector to act is rapidly shrinking. It requires a massive step change in efforts to prepare for displacement at scale. What is encouraging is that solutions are already at work that are sustainably preventing, minimizing and addressing climate-induced displacement. The success of financial inclusion initiatives for refugees in Uganda for example provides important global learnings about how to build comprehensive resilience solutions for people on the move. These solutions need to be scaled, and new solutions need to be identified. Finally, let’s not forget that climate-induced displacement is a global issue, and thus requires a global response. A sense of shared responsibility is especially important in light of prevailing sentiments in the Global North around migratory movements across borders. It’s vital that the international community ensures sustained and targeted investment in solutions to the complex challenges presented by climate-induced displacement – and do so in way that upholds human dignity.

  • A Displaced Nation: How Colombia Has Supported the Financial Inclusion of its Forcibly Displaced Populations

    Author: Laura Cordero. On March 14, e-MFP was pleased to launch the European Microfinance Award (EMA) 2024 , which is on ‘Advancing Financial Inclusion for Refugees and Forcibly Displaced People’. This is the 15th edition of the Award, which was launched in 2005 by the Luxembourg Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs — Directorate for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Affairs, and which is jointly organised by the Ministry, e-MFP, and the Inclusive Finance Network Luxembourg ( InFiNe.lu ), in cooperation with the European Investment Bank. In the fourth of e-MFP’s annual series of guest blogs on this topic, Laura Cordero presents the history of displacement within and to Colombia, and how that country has put public processes in place and mobilised its financial inclusion actors  to address this challenge  - with valuable lessons for others . Colombia has a long history of forced displacement. The internal conflict has lasted almost 80 years and resulted in one of the largest internally displaced population in the world: more than 8.6 million people . It is also the number one destination of migrants from Venezuela: 2.8 million as of 2023. Totally combined, they represent around one fifth of the Colombian population. Few other countries in the world have had to face a displacement challenge paramount to this in terms of volume, share of the population and diversity. And unfortunately, both types of forced displacement continue to grow. As in most countries, issues affecting those that have been internally displaced are handled by public and private actors separately from those regarding foreign immigrants. Yet, many of the challenges that both populations face are similar, and a significant proportion of them end up joining the ranks of the most vulnerable groups, posing similar pressures to the national health, education, and social protection systems. Over the last twenty years the Colombian government has put in place several measures to tackle the complex and multi-faceted problem of forced displacement. The Victim’s Law , issued in 2011, kickstarted a comprehensive reparation program for the victims of the armed conflict and strengthened humanitarian attention to those forcibly displaced (around 90% of the registered victims). Now Colombia is currently in the process of approving a new law related to climate-related forced displacement, an increasing cause of internal population movements. Migration from Venezuela is not new to Colombia, but since 2018 the migrant population has more than tripled , requiring new targeted policies being implemented. Among other important measures, the creation in 2021 of the Temporary Protection Statute for Venezuelan Migrants has allowed  almost 2 million migrants to acquire legal status in the country. Public efforts to financially include forcibly displaced populations n terms of financial inclusion, both groups – IDPs and migrants from Venezuela – have been targeted by public policies, often using similar instruments but via different programs and entities. While the 2020 national financial inclusion policy provides the general framework to support financial inclusion in the country, targeted strategies such as the National Strategy to Promote the Integration of Venezuelan Migrants have specific financial inclusion targets. In practice, examples of public sector support measures to both target groups include the following: Issuing financial norms and legislations aimed at facilitating access to financial products, such as the first simplified savings accounts, or providing guidance to financial institutions on Know Your Clients (KYC) processes for the case of Venezuelan migrants; Including financial inclusion-related measures within the humanitarian and reparation programs to those displaced by the conflict; Linking social protection and financial inclusion efforts via the conditional cash transfer programs. These programs have often resulted in massive opening of deposit and transactional accounts thanks to Government agreements with banks and e-wallet operators; Issuing targeted credit lines to financial institutions via Bancoldex and FINAGRO (apex institutions) or providing guarantees via the National Guarantee Fund (FNG) to finance these specific groups; and Partnering with international development organizations to fund and implement financial inclusion programs, such as UNHCR, USAID, or the International Finance Corporation. The role of financial service providers But beyond public and international cooperation actors, how is the financial sector in Colombia including forcibly displaced populations? The answer is not so straightforward. To start, there is a big information asymmetry: we have good information on financial inclusion of Venezuelan migrants, not so much regarding internally displaced population. We know, for example, that approximately 27% of Venezuelan migrants in Colombia have a deposit product in a financial institution: a big improvement over the last few years. The Temporary Residence Permit (PPT) is increasingly accepted by financial sector providers, yet there are still obstacles related to validation, documents equivalence and internal systems adaptation that still need to be surmounted. According to Fundación Capital , Fintechs are currently playing a leading role in the financial inclusion of migrants in Colombia, offering digital wallets associated with an increasing variety of financial services. These products respond to migrants' immediate need to be able to send and receive money, make payments, send remittances. Also, some of this often digitally-savvy population prefers this channel that reduces the (conscious or unconscious) biases that they sometimes encounter in the face-to-face service. Transactions with some of these wallets are used by credit bureaus and there are even digital platforms that offer ‘nano-credits’ based on scoring systems. There are also a few microfinance banks and cooperatives that also target this segment, some in partnership with cooperation agencies such as the German Savings Bank’s Foundation to provide a more comprehensive support to the migrants. Yet, the perceived high risk and operating costs hinder traditional (micro)credit supply: latest available figures indicate that only 1.3% of this population have access to formal credit. There are however no disaggregated data on financial inclusion of internally displaced population. The latest financial inclusion figures in the country – with 91% of adult Colombian population with access to an account or digital wallet in 2022 - indicate that most internally displaced probably are financially included. However, scarce data are available regarding access to credit or other financial services, since financial service providers do not normally collect displacement related information in their systems. Many financial institutions have made use of the public specialized credit lines mentioned above, funding at least 165,000 credit operations to victim owned businesses since 2012 (Bancoldex, 2024). Different but similar market segments Therefore, with available data we cannot draw a global picture on financial inclusion levels of all forcibly displaced population in Colombia. Financial institutions view these two groups as different market segments and each of them pose distinctive challenges. The Venezuelan migrant population is very heterogeneous. Yet, data show that Venezuelan migrants have a harder time finding a job, when they find it is often not related to their education or prior experience, and they are offered worse conditions than to their Colombian counterparts. Credit histories from Venezuela are incomplete or inaccessible, and most have no records in Colombian credit bureaus. Language and cultural differences are not significant, yet the relationship between the financial system and its clients differs in both countries, so cultural awareness is needed from clients and financial service providers. But most importantly, migrants are considered as a high-risk market due mainly to the real or perceived “flight risk”. Internally displaced population do not present the same challenges in terms of access to the financial system: most have Colombian nationality (although some ID documents may have been lost during displacement). Many were suddenly -and violently- displaced, leaving with nothing but the clothes on their back. Some resettled in rural areas, but most went to the informal settlements around bigger cities. Their poverty levels are also higher than the Colombian average. Their credit histories have also suffered, despite the issuance of specific regulations creating a “special risk category” for loans affected by the displacement and other violent events. Overtime, many have integrated in their host communities and are no longer seen as “displaced”. There are important similarities among these two -yet very heterogeneous- population groups. And these similarities revolve around the displacement itself and its consequences: the loss of assets and livelihoods; the need to rebuild their life and perhaps start a new economic activity; the traumas associated to the forced displacement; the reliance on personal networks in the host community. From a financial institutions’ perspective, these two population groups present distinct challenges in terms of KYC compliance, but credit risk analysis may not – in principle - differ too much. After all, Colombian financial institutions have a long experience attending forcibly displaced populations: but do they know to what extent are they serving them? Are there any good practices or lessons learned? Can the experience with one group be useful to serve the other? Further research would be needed to answer these questions. What lessons can we draw? Colombian public and private institutions have a long experience supporting the financial inclusion of forcibly displaced population. While most internally displaced have access to the financial system, more needs to be known regarding the depth and effectiveness of that inclusion. With regards to Venezuelan migrants, it seems a matter of time that their ID documents are widely accepted, and a majority can access a deposit product. Access to a wider range of products and particularly credit remains low and calls for further innovation in de-risking strategies.   Financial service providers in Colombia may have some interesting practice in client screening and segmentation (for example, assessing recovery from displacement and integration in the host community), risk appraisal adaptations, or portfolio metrics that could be applied to Venezuelan migrants. Further evaluating the results of public policy investment in supporting the victims of the armed conflict can also shed light on how to further support the Venezuelan population. There are certainly lessons to be learned, such as the type and duration of support needed for the socioeconomic stabilization and recovery. An important one is that “rebuilding their life project”, a central idea around the comprehensive support provided to the victims, is a pre-condition to positive socio-economic outcomes. In summary: without forgetting the important differences, let’s focus on the experience and learnings from the impressive effort that Colombia has already made and can be applied to financially include all those forcibly displaced in a meaningful and sustainable way. Special thanks to: Aida Solano, Alicia Rueda, Daniela Pradilla, Diego Andrés Rueda, Liliana Cortés, María Fernanda Manrique, Meik Proescher and Veruschka Zilveti for their invaluable contributions. About the Author: Laura Cordero is an independent consultant with more than 15 years of professional experience supporting financial inclusion of vulnerable population in Africa, Latin America, Asia and Europe. She has worked on Colombian internally displaced and migrant population topics since 2013, collaborating with Fundación Capital and the German Savings Banks Foundation, among others. She holds a BSc. in Economics from the Complutense University of Madrid, and a MSc. in Foreign Service from Georgetown University.

  • When Fintech Meets Traditional Informal Financial Schemes: Recent Trends & Innovations in Digitising Rotating Savings and Credit Associations (ROSCAs)

    Author: Dalia Ali. In this latest e-MFP guest blog, Dalia Ali, discusses trends and challenges of fintechs digitising the ROSCA model, and provides examples of how this is now happening. The case for Rotating Savings and Credit Associations ROSCAs The Rotating Savings and Credit Association (ROSCA) stands as one of the oldest and most popular informal financial institutions, that thrives on community-based pooling of resources and is driven by shared trust and mutual support of the group. A group of individuals, typically from a close-knit community, agree to contribute a fixed sum regularly, typically on monthly basis. The accumulated funds are then distributed to each group member in rotation. The order of this lump-sum distribution is either randomly assigned or based on financial need, as agreed upon by the group members. ROSCAs are an imperfect alternative to the mainstream banks that help participants save money and access credit, which otherwise might be difficult for them to obtain from the conventional financial market. ROSCAs are very prevalent among adults in developing countries, with membership rates reaching up to 95% in several African nations like the Republic of Congo, Cameroon, Gambia, Ivory Coast, Togo, and Nigeria. [1] They also have a different name in each country, such as Ajo in Nigeria, Susu in the Caribbean, Tanda in Mexico, pandeiros in Brazil, and Ekub in Ethiopia. An important foundation and prerequisite for the effective functioning of ROSCAs is the existence of social capital and strong mutual trust among the participants. People rely on social capital and local information to evaluate the reliability and creditworthiness of a borrower. The ease of information flow and circulation between people, particularly in rural communities, helps in establishing and sharing local information about the people who live in the same area. [2] The existence of mutual trust among the participants significantly limits the transaction costs, as monitoring is not required. [3] ROSCAs tend to be formed by a group of individuals of a cohesive community who are aware of the socio economic status, reliability, and social capital of each other. Thus, in the absence of legal enforcement mechanisms, peer pressure and the fear of being ostracized by the community will guarantee the continuation of payments. [4] Trends and innovations in digitising ROSCAs ROSCAs play a vital and instrumental role in the informal sector, helping their members, who are predominantly women, with accessing savings and interest-free loans. Over the past decade, numerous fintech start-ups have sought to harness the potential of ROSCAs by integrating the model into the mainstream financial landscape through digital transformation. Here are some examples of start-ups that are digitising ROSCAs: Oraan in Pakistan Oraan is Pakistan’s first woman-led fintech startup which was founded in 2018. Their digitised ROSCA focuses primarily on women. With only 13% of Pakistani women having access to financial services , Oraan’s mission is to make financial services accessible for every woman in the country . Upon registration, users can join one or multiple groups that align with their financial goals and preferences. Furthermore, they have launched "Oraan SNPL", a new product in collaboration with four Pakistani universities, specifically designed to finance students from these partner institutions . By November 2021, they announced reaching a milestone of growing their community to 2 million women. Equbs in Ethiopia In 2020, eQUB launched a digital savings platform that is based on the ROSCA model, locally known as Equb in Ethiopia. Users can filter and explore different Equbs and select one based on their preference in terms of location, amount deposit and frequency of contributions. In each sub-round, the Equb wheel is spun, randomly selecting a member to receive the lump-sum amount. In an effort to streamline the process of cash deposits on collection days for Equb members, they have collaborated with Hibret Bank in Ethiopia for the launch of a new product named ‘Equb Collection Deposit Account .’ Although having a similar name, Digital eQub is another fintech in Ethiopia that aims to enhance accessibility by enabling individuals to join an Equb group without physical meeting constraints. Members can make their contributions via mobile banking or Telebirr and can opt to collect their funds in cash. Despite members potentially being unfamiliar with each other, they are required to provide verifiable credentials like ID cards, income statements, and business licenses. To facilitate the fintech’s services, Digital eQub has partnered with the Commercial Bank of Ethiopia and with The Bank of Abysinnia. MoneyFellows in Egypt Founded in late 2016, MoneyFellows was launched also with the goal to digitise Gameeyas, which is the commonly known name of ROSCA in Egypt. To ensure security, every user is required to sign a legally binding contract following a thorough credit assessment. The process is fully digitised and offers multiple different options for online payment (including salary deduction for corporate employees). They serve more than 4 million users and have over 300 employees . Other fintechs There are several other fintechs that leverage ROSCAs, including Mapan, launched in Indonesia in 2011 and now having around 3 million users ; Sommos , founded in Bolivia in 2020 and expanded to Peru in 2023; and Tyms Africa ( formerly known as AjoMoney ), founded in Nigeria in 2021. The latter uses the ROSCA model to serve not only individuals but also micro-businesses, SMEs and Nigerians in the diaspora. The trend of digitising ROSCA extends beyond developing countries, with US-based fintech Money Pool distinguishing itself by adding a digital credit report to each member's profile to foster reliable online rotating pool funds . Potential challenges In recent years, there has been a growing trend of the emergence of fintech startups across various countries where their model is based on capitalizing ROSCAs’ potential by digitising the model, making financial services more accessible, convenient, and efficient. Except Sommos, most of these startups focus solely on the local market. Users can explore different groups and make selection based on their preferences for deposit amount frequency of contributions, and sometimes even location. These platforms offer group management tools, track payments, and record-keeping. Each fintech has a unique approach to ROSCA's digital transformation. Some offer a fully digitised experience, like Oraan in Pakistan. Others, like eQub and Digital eQub in Ethiopia, have partnered with banks to facilitate deposit collection. Moreover, some fintechs expand their products and offer financing to students and SMEs.    Currently, there is no available specific research on the challenges of digitising ROSCAs. However, enforcing payments in a digital setting can be challenging. Traditional ROSCAs are formed by close-knit community (group of friends, neighbours, relatives etc.) that rely on shared trust (as well as fear of reputational damage and being ostracized) to comply with regular payments, which might not translate seamlessly into a digital environment where the ROSCA members might be from different communities and locations. Fintechs mitigate this risk by requiring verification documents and income statements during registration like eQub in Ethiopia. MoneyFellows in Egypt takes it a step further and requires signing a legally binding contract, while the US-based Money Pool adds a digital credit report to each member's profile. Several of these fintechs have successfully established a solid ground and substantial user base, counting millions of users. The ongoing digital transformation of ROSCAs presents considerable market potential, suggesting the likelihood of more fintechs emerging in other countries to digitise ROSCAs. Thus, it unveils untapped resources and investment opportunities in these burgeoning local fintech start-ups. For any questions, please contact Dalia.Ali@gopa-afc.de Photos: GOPA AFC About the Author Dalia Ali holds a Master's degree in International and Development Economics and is Certified Expert in Microfinance, as well as in ESG & Impact Investment. Over the past four years, Dalia has been involved in conducting extensive research on community-based traditional saving schemes. Additionally, she has been working with various consulting companies to drive the implementation of donor-funded financial inclusion initiatives across Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East. ________ [1] Anderson, S., & Baland, J. (2002). The economics of ROSCAs and intrahousehold resource allocation. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 117(3). [2] Robinson, M. (2001). The microfinance revolution. Washington, D.C.: World Bank. [3] Habtom, G., & Ruys, P. (2006). Traditional risk-sharing arrangements and informal social insurance in Eritrea. Health Policy, 80(1), pp. 218-235. [4] Hevener, C. (2006). Alternative financial vehicles: rotating savings and credit associations (ROSCAs). Community Development Division of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.

  • Effective Public-Private Partnerships to Advance Financial Inclusion and Financial Well-Being of Forcibly Displaced Persons and their Hosts – Aligning the Business Cases

    Authors: Lene M. P. Hansen & Micol Pistelli. On March 14, e-MFP was pleased to launch the European Microfinance Award (EMA) 2024 , which is on ‘Advancing Financial Inclusion for Refugees and Forcibly Displaced People’. This is the 15th edition of the Award, which was launched in 2005 by the Luxembourg Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs — Directorate for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Affairs, and which is jointly organised by the Ministry, e-MFP, and the Inclusive Finance Network Luxembourg ( InFiNe.lu ), in cooperation with the European Investment Bank. In the fifth of e-MFP’s annual series of guest blogs on this topic, Lene Hansen and Micol Pistelli from UNHCR discuss the role of public-private partnerships between humanitarian actors, development agencies, host governments and the private sector,  and the factors that underpin their effectiveness. In recent years, the importance of partnerships between the humanitarian, development, and private sectors in protracted displacement contexts has become increasingly evident to enhance the socio-economic wellbeing of forcibly displaced and stateless persons. However, developing these partnerships to be effective, sustainable and impactful is not always easy, and guidance is scarce. How can solutions be co-created in partnerships between the humanitarian sector (with its focus on immediate aid through cash assistance), development agencies (with their focus on longer-term poverty alleviation), and the private sector )with its focus on profitability and value creation)? And how can this be done in ways that also engage host governments, focused on cost-effectively improving the lot for citizens? Bridging the gaps between differing terminology, priorities and systems for funding and measuring impact is a work in progress. But progress has been made. There is widespread recognition that working through markets as shared platforms can channel sustainable contributions to improving the wellbeing of People and the Planet while enabling business Profit. But working together to support – rather than distort - market systems and make them stronger, more inclusive, and more environmentally sustainable, is no small feat. For longer-term sustainable partnerships between public and private sector actors in displacement contexts to succeed, the business cases must be clearer. To broker better market-led partnerships , we propose focusing on at least four elements: A shared understanding of a contextual problem; Jointly defined common goals; Policy anchors and trust-building to enable flexible collaboration; and Capacity for sustainability and scale. But who takes on which roles in the partnership? How are comparative advantages and additionality applied? How can all actors work better together, given the constraints of each context of displacement? Let’s look at each of these elements in more detail. 1. Defining and Documenting a Shared Contextual Problem: Better Data Effective partnerships define a common problem and seek solutions together. In many markets, exclusion or restricted access to labour markets, formal employment and entrepreneurship remain a challenge for the forcibly displaced. This prevents them from contributing meaningfully to the local economies, building resilience, and be less aid-dependent. Humanitarian organizations with their field presence can bring in-depth knowledge of the needs and challenges faced by people who are forced to flee in accessing labour markets and financial services. When such insights and data are presented to provide evidence of benefits and value creation, collaborative solutions can more easily be designed. Importantly, humanitarian actors can leverage their networks to bring representatives of the forcibly displaced and their hosts, to the table through Refugee-led Organisations or other NGOs , to help clarify the challenges, based on their lived experiences. Development agencies can apply their analytical expertise to assess existing gaps ,  and clarify the costs and net benefits of increased inclusion for host governments, providing evidence of the contributions and economic dividends of the forcibly displaced – and other migrants – to local economies, when their skills match the local labour market needs. As a source of expertise, innovation, and sustainable business models, the private sector is an integral part of any local economy, working to produce, exchange and distribute goods and services, while also serving as one of the main sources of employment and livelihoods, both locally and increasingly remotely. But for the private sector to engage, there must be win-wins. There must be additional value created, and there must be a use case. Private sector entities can help define how these use cases should look and what data is needed to demonstrate their viability. For this reason, they should be engaged from the very start of the process. Governments create the conditions under which effective participation in markets is possible. By limiting access to work, they inadvertently prevent the forcibly displaced from becoming self-reliant. This perpetuates their dependency on scarce aid budgets and overwhelmed social protection systems, while contributing to informality in the labour market. Prioritizing these - or other - problems can help pinpoint how market-led solutions may have the greatest impact. 2. Defining Common Goals: Diverse Contributions based on Comparative Strengths All stakeholders in a partnership need to understand each other’s realities, comparative advantages, and constraints to define common goals in their specific context. Partnerships should have clear, measurable objectives that focus on delivering positive change for local communities of forcibly displaced and their hosts, e.g., increased financial wellbeing for all through employment and entrepreneurship opportunities. Financial wellbeing goes beyond inclusion —access to income and financial products and their usage – to measure resilience and behaviours such as spending wisely, building reserves, and planning ahead. By leveraging the comparative strengths of all actors, stronger, more sustainable and more inclusive local economies can be built, improving the wellbeing for everyone. For humanitarian actors , it’s easy to get caught up in the immediate delivery of basic services to the forcibly displaced. To develop more effective partnerships, it helps to extend the outlook and clarify the outcomes to be achieved for the forcibly displaced – and their host communities. The aspirations  of the forcibly displaced for peace, stability and a more secure, resilient life where they can contribute meaningfully to their community, resonate better with other stakeholder groups. In their overall drive for poverty alleviation, development actors tend to focus on market failures, poor infrastructure, and weak governance, which can make both private and public investments costly and risky. Documenting how existing markets function can help more people better contribute to these markets and crowd-in more actors. Private sector partners can offer innovation, technology, and financial resources to help close the gaps identified and demonstrate use cases of inclusion in employment and entrepreneurship. Recognizing that inclusive local markets can offer employment and entrepreneurship opportunities that benefit both the forcibly displaced and their host communities and also reduce dependency on aid and eventually decrease budgetary pressures, governments can design and implement policies encouraging economic transformation and inclusive growth. This involves creating regulatory environments conducive to investment, productivity growth, business expansion, and employment. By creating incentives for the private sector to engage in displacement locations, which may otherwise be overlooked due to profitability considerations, public sector actors can foster inclusive markets growth, as the Shirika Plan in Kenya aims to do. 3. Building Trust with Policy Anchors and ‘Skin in the Game’ Actors have different takes on solutions for better socio-economic inclusion and financial wellbeing for all. Great partnerships are built on principles of equality, respect, and shared accountability. However, partners don’t have to agree on everything and do things in the same way – as long as everyone aligns their interests and works towards the common goal. Committing to core values such as inclusivity, transparency, and sustainability helps build trust and a common vision for positive change, serving as a frame of reference for the partnership even during difficult patches. International agreements and frameworks like the Kampala Declaration on Jobs, Livelihoods and Self-reliance in East Africa and its Roadmaps , aim to foster community resilience and economic participation. Linked to the Global Compact on Refugees and the Global Forum for Refugees, there are currently 86 pledges made by governments in the area of economic inclusion and social protection whose effects on the labor market participation of the displaced would multiply if matched by interventions sustained by the private sector – including investors and financial institutions. Private sector initiatives like IKEA Group's NESsT Refugee Employment Programme in Poland and Romania, and the pan-African Amahoro Coalition highlight the transformative potential of market-based solutions for economic inclusion. Key actions to strengthen the partnerships into alliances and crowd-in new actors include: Organizing policy dialogues , roundtables, and forums to enable direct engagement between policymakers, private sector entities, development actors, humanitarian partners, and the affected communities themselves to review progress on initiatives and suggest course-corrections; Conducting joint research on the impacts of inclusive policies, initiatives and pilots to identify remaining pain points, opportunities, and progress towards financial wellbeing for all; and Sharing learnings and case studies on both successes and lessons learned. Colombia's integration of Venezuelan refugees and migrants, for example, has boosted the economy by filling labour gaps and increasing consumer demand, despite ongoing challenges like credential recognition. Effective partnerships require willingness, capacity, and readiness to invest time and resources in relationship-building over time . Joint investment fosters a sense of shared ownership, as demonstrated by the Joint Initiative between IFC and UNHCR aimed at increasing private sector engagement in creating better markets in displacement contexts worldwide. Financial inclusion is also a key component of this initiative to enable access to finance for forcibly displaced people across Latin America and in Europe . All partners must be prepared to commit resources – whether financial or human – towards achieving the common goal, pilot the agreed use cases, share risks, and work towards scalable solutions. However, uncoordinated efforts and silos between stakeholders often prevents the right capital to get to where it’s needed most. Communication and building alliances with local partners can amplify the partnership and enhance sustainability. Local partners are often better at finding and selecting the right partners , and  including refugee-led and other local community organisations is especially important. The assumption that Refugee-Led Organizations are “too risky” is generally unfounded, and both humanitarian and development partners need to be better at engaging with them. 4. Capacity to Deliver Outcomes Sustainably and at Scale A good partnership needs the right mix of capacities, which may change over time. These capacities include: Physical Presence and Networks : On-the-ground presence is essential for reaching forcibly displaced people where they reside. Humanitarian organizations often have field offices and a broad supportive network of Refugee-Led Organizations  and other NGOs, which can provide private sector and development partners with real-life examples of challenges as well as logistical support to reach displacement settings. Technical Capacity : Relevant expertise in areas such as financial technology, mobile banking, data analytics, regulatory systems management, and convening power is crucial for designing and implementing effective inclusion programs. Complementary expertise in supportive areas such as financial education and technical support to financial service providers is important. An example of supportive non-financial service is provided by the ILO’s financial education program for refugees and host communities and their trainings addressed to FSPs. Financial Capacity : Adequate funding is necessary to support the scaling of inclusion initiatives. Impact investors, development financial institutions and FSPs can provide the resources needed to extend their services and pilot new approaches. Blending concessional capital, commercial capital, and grants is becoming increasingly popular in the development sector. Successful partnerships require a willingness to invest in the agreed use case, share risks, and work towards scalable solutions. Sharing the Perceived Risk: Partnerships should include mechanisms for sharing the perceived risks. Governments and development finance institutions can provide subsidies, concessional capital, and other mechanisms to mitigate risk for private sector entities and ensure profitability. The joint blended finance program launched by Swedish Sida, UNHCR and Grameen Credit Agricole Foundation in Uganda in 2019, comprised debt funding and technical assistance, as well as a lender’s guarantee and reached over 120,000 refugee and host entrepreneurs with credit and other financial and non-financial services. New initiatives, like the Refugee Development Impact Bond model in Jordan leverages the complementary resources of private and public actors on a ‘repayment for results’ basis, enabling the testing of solutions beyond the constraints of activity-based annual funding cycles. Scalability : The goal is to develop interventions that can be scaled to benefit a larger population of forcibly displaced and their hosts. Partners need to consider how their initiatives can grow beyond initial pilot projects to reach scale across different regions and contexts. For example, KIVA has a large and diverse network of FSPs and has demonstrated proof of concept with the most scalable initiative in the financial sector, additionally reporting a 96% client repayment rate among displaced customers. At the last Global Refugee Forum, Kiva pledged to scale their lending to displaced populations, and by the end of 2025 the organization aims to provide an additional $40m in loans to at least 65,000 people. Measuring outcomes : Without measuring outcomes, no partnership can know if objectives are being attained. The Global Partnership for Effective Development Cooperation has recently launched the Kampala Principles Assessment process in Burkina Faso to collect evidence on the challenges and opportunities to improve private sector engagement. Measuring financial wellbeing (or financial health) is still a work in progress, but indicators of the four aspects of financial health have been incorporated and benchmarked in the annual 60-decibel Microfinance Index . These indicators could be disaggregated by population segments, to enable tracking of progress towards better financial wellbeing in displacement contexts, as demonstrated by FIND research across markets. About the Authors: Lene M.P. Hansen has worked for 25 years as a field-based consultant in inclusive financial sector development and microfinance. Since 2005, she has specialised in expanding access to finance in fragile and conflict-affected environments. She has focused on financial inclusion of migrants and refugee populations since 2015, when she began the research resulting in the global Guidelines for FSPs , and has since worked with FSPs in Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, Afghanistan, Mozambique, and Uganda to financially include foreign born and displaced residents. Lene has served in longer-term project management positions in Nepal (1995-99), Uganda (1999-2003) and Palestine (2007) and provides shorter-term technical assistance in ‘refugee-readiness’ for FSPs, project design and appraisals, portfolio reviews and evaluations for donor agencies, investors and central banks; as well as training, performance monitoring and industry building support to microfinance industries primarily in Africa and the MENA region. Based in South Africa, Lene holds a Master’s degree in Political Science from Copenhagen University and has been a visiting fellow at the Feinstein International Center of Tuft’s University, USA. She served on CGAP’s SmartAid Review Board in 2011 and is a member of the e-MFP Advancing Refugee Finance Action Group and the Danish Microfinance Forum. Micol Pistelli is a Senior Financial Inclusion Coordinator at UNHCR, where she provides technical support to country operations aimed at promoting initiatives and efforts to ensure that forcibly displaced persons can participate in and benefit from formal financial services. Before joining UNHCR, Micol was the Director of Social Performance at MIX, where she helped shaping the international standards of social performance management for financial service providers in the microfinance industry.  She has also been a board advisor of several initiatives in the financial inclusion sector, a lecturer at the Master in microfinance and entrepreneurship at the Universidad Autonoma in Madrid, and a consultant with the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and with microfinance institutions in Egypt and Paraguay. Micol  holds a Master’s Degree in International Economics and Development from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) and a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science from the University of Bologna.

  • Six Years of Scale2Save: The Programme, Findings – and the Way Ahead

    Author: Weselina Angelow. A basic account is a secure entry point for previously unbanked people to become more resilient. It also opens a wealth of opportunities – for investing in education, or growing their businesses. Programme background A six-year partnership with the Mastercard Foundation and WSBI, Scale2Save is a programme to establish the viability of low–balance savings accounts and to understand the extent to which savings allow vulnerable people to boost their financial resilience and wellbeing. The programme’s work is anchored by developing viable business models with a broad mix of financial service providers that create high-usage cases that widen financial inclusion. This occurs by improving the quality of savings, alternative distribution channels and the financial service offer in general. Scale2Save balances project work with research conducted and shared among partner banks and the wider sector. Scale2Save in a nutshell Between 2016 and 2022, Scale2Save financially included more than 1.3 million women, young people and farmers in Kenya, Uganda, Nigeria, Morocco, Senegal and Côte d’Ivoire that helped us better understand how, when and why savings contribute to household wellbeing, financial resilience or (creating) business opportunities of or for the people served. Gender and age aspects mattered hugely, but also location and income levels for driving inclusive savings. Scale2Save customer research observed differences between ways in which young female customers and young male and elderly customers used their savings. While young females more often use savings for consumption smoothing and for other household-related expenses, young males and older women of the age of 35+ more frequently used their savings for business-related purposes. Given that Scale2Save happened in the midst of a pandemic, in locations where weather shocks are rather frequent, and where partner FSPs were targeting some of the most vulnerable income groups, we were pleased to see that more than 65% of customers who reported experiencing one or multiple shocks indicated that they were able to use some of their savings to cope with these emergencies. Since most customers are low-income, investments in expanding, restarting, or opening a business can increase income quickly, thereby improving customers’ economic status and financial stability. On average, about 49% used their savings for investment purposes, and most of the time for business-related investments. Almost all financial service providers recorded use of savings for businesses with 50% of them being male adults. Business investment was also quite common among adult women. This largely stems from the fact that partner FSPs purposely targeted female micro-entrepreneurs and encouraged them to save toward the purchase of a productive asset or another business-related goal. In our smallholder farmer portfolio we saw that savings allow producers to more easily access quality inputs on credit that subsequently lead to greater productivity gains but also higher resilience. Further, increased access to credit for other income generating activities as well as access to skillset-building offers and agric platforms pushed up farm productivity overall. Beyond business investments, approximately 20% of customers used their savings to cover daily household needs or to finance educational needs. In the words of one of the customers of a Scale2Save initiative, implemented in partnership with Centenary Bank: “I got to know about CenteXpress account from my friend who helped me open the account. I learned about its benefits from my friend and I also started opening accounts for other students (through the digital link feature) I have greatly benefited from CenteXpress through the commissions that I have received for opening accounts for others. Further, my parents send me school tuition digitally via CenteXpress. I also use it to buy airtime. More importantly, it helps me save the little amounts that I can set aside from my tailoring business.” - Nakayima Magret, Student and tailor. Kikuubo, Masaka, Uganda During the implementation of the project, 12 unique business models were tested Scale2Save tested and explored 12 unique business models with a broad range of financial services partners to prove the viability of low balance savings and understand how the institutional model affects the ability to serve the low-income market. Business models were tested with Advans Cote D’Ivoire, Al Barid Banque and Barid Cash Morocco, BRAC Uganda Bank Limited, Centenary Bank Uganda, Cofina Senegal, FINCA Uganda and FINCA International, First City Monument Bank Nigeria, Kenya Post Office Savings Bank, LAPO Microfinance Bank Nigeria, Postbank Uganda. The variety of institutions created a whole world of experience that all worked towards the same goal: build partnerships and solutions that are intentional and simple but meet the needs of the specific customer segments they are serving. Digitalisation has been a game changer throughout and not just during COVID but needs to be handled with a gender lens and accompanied by human touch if it is to be successful. If a product worked for women, it equally tended to work for men. The local sales forces, roving agents, field officers, family & friends equipped with digital devices were instrumental for creating the volumes of transactions and deposits needed for making the business case for small balance savings work. Financial education – in particular, personal ‘nudges’ – that take women’s needs and the digital gender gap into account are considered key for improving digital account usage. Research Scale2Save became a strong brand and a community of practice that conducted useful sector research, collaborated with a wide array of sector players and that facilitates disseminating the learnings amongst our members and strategic partners. Our sector research For four years in a row, The State of Savings and Retail Banking Sector Series that we put out in partnership with FinMark Trust shed light on innovative models, applied by the now 27 WSBI member institutions in 20 countries on the African continent, sometimes enriched with insights from other sector players such as MNOs, Fintechs, the national Financial Sector Deepening units, the most recent on the state of SME Finance and separately on Innovative Agric Platform models on the African continent. Collaboration with sector players Jointly with Efina (the lead Financial Sector Development Organization in Nigeria) we piloted a customer segmentation tool that creates evidence-based customer personas and allows Nigerian financial sector players to define their pro-women, pro-youth financial or green pro-farm outreach strategies. The tool is a powerful data marketplace that combines demographic and livelihood data hosted on and AI platform with financial inclusion data and has already generated interest from other financial markets. Together with the Bank of Uganda (BoU) – the Central Bank – we tested the CGAP customer outcome framework in Uganda. This framework could help Ugandan FSPs to assess how they meet customer needs around safety, convenience, fairness, voice and choice of services. It can also help the Ugandan and other central banks to assess how the sector meets the goals of its financial inclusion strategy and could thus be taken to other countries. Insights from Scale2Save also allowed us to participate in the European Microfinance Platform’s Action Group on better metrics for savings. The way ahead We now have a better understanding of the metrics that track high-level outcomes. This will help WSBI to leverage on the impact its network of 6400 savings and retails banks globally makes to develop people, businesses, and communities. It has also enabled us to position ourselves for the climate resilience and adaptation agenda that lays ahead of us and the upcoming COP 28 in UAE to make sure that financial services offered through the network of WSBI members continue to be an enabler helping address global shocks, inequalities, and underdevelopment. For more resources from Scale2Save on: Women & Youth: click here MSMEs, Agents And Agriculture Value Chain Suppliers: click here Business Models: click here Côte d’Ivoire: click here Kenya: click here Morocco: click here Nigeria: click here Senegal: click here Uganda: click here About the Author: Weselina Angelow leads WSBI’s Scale2Save initiative in partnership with Mastercard Foundation. She has managed and implemented large-scale financial inclusion and financial sector development programmes with WSBI for more than a decade across the globe. Part of WSBI worldwide efforts to provide an account for everyone and making a contribution to universal financial access, Weselina manages the institute’s learning agenda on small-scale savings where she places focus on understanding the viability of low-balance accounts, the drivers of account usage and factors that improve the financial health of underserved and low-income people. Prior to joining WSBI, she worked with pixell, an Amadeus Leisure Group company in Germany, and in private sector development with GIZ – Germany's Agency for International Cooperation – in Chile. Weselina holds a Master in Economics and Social Sciences from Bonn University and an Executive Master in Responsible Banking from Instituto de Estudios Bursatiles in partnership with London School of Economics and WSBI. weselina.angelow@wsbi-esbg.org

  • e-MFP Welcomes New Member L-IFT: Guest Blog on the ‘What’, ‘How’ and ‘Why’ of ‘Business Diaries’

    Author: Anne Marie van Swinderen. e-MFP is delighted to welcome Low-Income Financial Transformation – L-IFT – as one of its newest members. L-IFT is a research organisation committed to empowering communities through data. L-IFT strives to make anonymised data accessible to all as a utility service, continuously building evidence to support the work of the financial inclusion and other sectors. L-IFT’s mission is to help communities take ownership of their data, learn from this data and to train youth to be customer-centric. Its motto is “listening to the unheard”. We at e-MFP invited L-IFT’s managing director Anne Marie van Swinderen to submit a guest blog telling the rest of the global e-MFP member base about an aspect of L-IFT’s work. In the following blog, she introduces Business Diaries (BuD) as the successor to the Small Firm Diaries, outlines the differences and future plans, and the role of the Android app and data portal FINBIT in the project. Welcome to the e-MFP network! Many of you will already be aware of the Small Firm Diaries, an initiative of the FAI at New York University, led by Jonathan Morduch and Tim Ogden. The Small Firm Diaries was done in partnership with L-IFT, the main research implementation partner. The goal of this study is to understand why small firms seldom grow. For the purposes of this study, "small" refers to all firms with two to twenty non-household employees. Since small firms provide employment to many, including people living below the poverty line, their growth in size would not only contribute to growing the economy, but also expand the number of people small firms employ. The original Small Firm Diaries (SFD) studied around 130 small firms each in Ethiopia, Colombia, Nigeria, Kenya, and Indonesia. In Fiji the study is still ongoing and includes a smaller sample, 50 firms. The study tracked these firms for an entire twelve months with Field Researchers visiting each firm weekly, interviewing them, and taking copies of their records. The diaries recorded the small firms’ daily transactions for income, expenses, savings, and loans as well as hours worked (by owner and workers), salaries, and what owners paid themselves. It also tracked their assets and how much the assets were used. Besides the diaries, the study included some 25 surveys to better understand the firms and their owners with modules on record keeping, firm history, financial services, employee management, and aspirations & strategy. The study shows in great detail the dynamics of a small firm over a period of a year. This gives uniquely detailed and sophisticated data that can show like no other study how complex the financial and business management of a small firm is. The FAI team is analysing the data and sharing important findings from the study across the different countries. To read about the learnings visit the Small Firm Diaries website. L-IFT is now setting up BuD: Business Diaries, which is the successor to the Small Firm Diaries. The BuD will be more action oriented, and not purely a study. The BuD will be a combination of learning, designing, testing, and improving and the participants themselves will be stakeholders that benefit from the process. During the BuD we will have lively and continuous communications with multiple organisations who need the data: financial inclusion actors (banks, MFIs, government agencies, international NGOs) and business development organisations (incubators, government departments in charge of SME development, etc). These partner organisations can be involved from the start if they like. They can receive the data on a continuous basis, with results accessible for them soon after collecting each round, allowing them to start reflecting on what story the data is telling. As the learning progresses, they can explore further and add surveys or individual questions and potentially get into a dialogue with (groups of) respondents. From the start partners will be invited to contribute questions or hypotheses to the BuD. For instance, to find out whether available training for businesses address their needs, and if the trained businesses implement what they learned. We also expect to explore the dynamics of employees and workers. Why do firms have trouble finding and keeping staff while there is such high unemployment? What skills do they need for recruitment and employee management? We also want to dive deep into the new digital options, particularly marketing via social media. How effective is this and could all businesses learn to use social media for sales? We also have great interest to learn more about collaborations between businesses and how useful business associations can be? Secondly, L-IFT proposes that the BuD also serves the participating small- and micro-businesses. They benefit from the diaries process, the resulting data, the analysis, and, ultimately, the BuD data may contribute to them accessing finance. In other studies, we have learned that diaries participants appreciate the time spent on diaries and that the intense repeated interviews help them get a better grip on their financial lives. Through the data analysis the project offers, the participating businesses learn more about the specifics of their own financial and business situation and the analysis helps them make informed decisions and focus more on those parts of their business that are more lucrative. The BuD will actively support the businesses to benefit from the data they report themselves. The BuD participants can access their financial history in FINBIT and use that information to convince a financial service provider to offer a loan or other financial services. The BuD can also be used for collecting ideas for improving businesses. Each BuD participant will be able to make suggestions for small interventions that they expect could strengthen their businesses. The study can then roll out some of these ideas, and the diaries data collection can measure the success of the experiment. The study will work with the BuD participants using a participatory process to gradually identify and design the intervention pilots. After designing the pilots, they can be rolled out with a sub-group of BuD participants to track in detail the changes (if any) that emerge in the pilot participants as compared to BuD participants who are not in the pilot. Finally, the BuD can include many participants making it possible to study more detailed segments, such as rural and agri-processing businesses per region, more women-owned businesses, and more youth-owned businesses. While it would be important that some proportion of the small- and micro-businesses in each country would be interviewed weekly by a trained field-researcher, we could have contingents of additional BuD participants who report their data themselves, with the help of a coach and some distance support. This approach will help reduce the cost per participant and expand the potential benefit of the study to hundreds of businesses. We are having conversations with many stakeholders from a number of countries. We hear what potential partners want to learn about these businesses, what experiments they want to run, and which interventions they want to test. If you want to be involved in this conversation, please get in touch with aswinderen@l-ift.com You can also attend a video-conference in which we present you more about BuD and how you may be able to get involved in Business Diaries. To receive information about the video-conference, reach out to Adonay Kebedom on adonayn@l-ift.com . About the Author: Anne Marie van Swinderen has been active in financial inclusion for three decades, living and working in three continents. She founded L-IFT in 2015 in order to focus on financial diaries and data empowerment of disadvantaged people. She is still fascinated by the complexity of people’s financial lives and their pandora’s box of tricks for solving challenges. Soon after founding L-IFT it became clear that participants of diaries studies appreciate the process and find they benefit from the approach and the data. L-IFT’s goal is now to assist large groups of under-served people to be able to build their financial history and use their data for decision making. L-IFT started building its technology FINBIT in 2018. FINBIT has now been used by about 10,000 people from 17 countries. She holds an MPhil from the Open University and a Bsc(ECON) from the London School of Economics.

  • On the Ground at European Microfinance Week: Discussing Technology’s Threat and Promise – and Fin...

    Author: Sam Mendelson. First published by NextBillion on 28 November 2018 and reproduced with permission. There were two topics that dominated debate at the recent European Microfinance Week (EMW) conference: the threats and opportunities brought about by the fintech revolution in inclusive finance, and the issue of financial inclusion for refugees and internally displaced persons. The event, organized by the European Microfinance Platform (e-MFP), provided the venue for a discussion of these issues that ranged from hopeful to surprisingly cautionary. Technology's double-edged sword EMW 2018 focused heavily on the spectre – or, depending on your perspective, the promise – of technology. The theme was approached from many angles, as panelists explored the opportunities and risks of digital financial services, Big Data and new fintech entrants into the sector. It was even the focus of the 2018 European Microfinance Award, Financial Inclusion through Technology. The opening plenary captured both sides of the issue, with a keynote speech from Graham Wright of MicroSave – who played the Cassandra role that suits him so well to implore the inclusive finance sector to pay attention to the risks that technology can pose to clients and institutions. He opened on a positive note. “The digital revolution offers us the chance to deliver rapid, responsive and differentiated financial services to low-income people in a way the industry has never been able to do in the past,” he said. He cited Equity Bank’s staggering level of technology integration: More than 97 percent of Equity Bank transactions in Kenya are conducted outside their branches, and more than 70 percent are self-initiated by clients on their mobile phones. This has had an amazing impact on the cost structure of transactions; IFC calculates that digitization reduces the costs to customers by 80 percent. There are powerful opportunities associated with this digital transformation in microfinance, Wright argued. It can significantly increase revenues and reduce costs; MFIs can leverage a long history of relationship banking to create real competitive advantage; it creates an opportunity for MFIs to provide a personalized user experiences; and it links microfinance services to the real-world economy. But he then cautioned attendees about the three existential threats this transformation can pose to microfinance providers: 1) out-dated and inflexible microfinance models; 2) emerging digital credit models that offer immediacy and convenience but risk a contagion of blacklisting clients; and 3) an emerging “digital divide” caused by the demise of MFIs that are unable to adapt. This latter risk threatens to result in fintechs serving (peri-) urban, high-value customers while leaving MFIs with low-value, rural areas, preventing cross-subsidisation by MFIs, and keeping low-income groups excluded from the latest technology innovations. To avoid this fate, he said, MFIs should not be complacent with the digital transformation in microfinance, and must implement actions which help them adapt to it, according to their structure and capacities, while remaining focused on what is best for their clients. Looking backwards and forwards The technology theme was also central to the new e-MFP publication, the Financial Inclusion Compass, launched during the conference. Derived from the mixed-methodology, inaugural e-MFP survey of financial inclusion trends conducted this summer, the Compass asked e-MFP members and other industry stakeholders to rate and speak to the importance (and direction) of various trends, to assess future “areas of focus,” and to provide open responses on the financial providers of the future, current challenges and opportunities, and their own forecasts and hopes in the medium-to-long term. The Compass is designed to look backwards as well as forwards, extrapolating from past experience, and providing an annual, longitudinal resource for comparison of how perceptions evolve. EMW’s Friday morning plenary also looked back as well as ahead. Entitled “Where next for microfinance: a view from The Founders,” it was moderated by Bernd Balkenhol from the University of Geneva. It brought together two practitioners who were pioneers in microfinance in their respective countries: Essma Ben Hamida, co-founder of Enda Tamweel in Tunisia, and Carmen Velasco, founder of Promujer in Bolivia; as well as one of the giants of microfinance academia, Hans Dieter Seibel, co-founder of e-MFP and Professor Emeritus from the University of Cologne. They explored the major landmarks and disappointments over their 30+ year careers and agreed that regulation – and the related issue of political interference – remains something they wish they could overcome. Regulation has constrained MFIs’ original role as disruptors, stymied innovation and limited the benefit that institutions can give to clients – such as taking deposits. The panellists agreed that the sector must continue to link financial inclusion to wellbeing, and not just access to financial services – and that the biggest impact of microfinance over the decades has been how it has enabled women to change their families and communities for the better, giving girls in particular new opportunities that their mothers lacked. The founders concluded with a discussion of technology – including a caution against the cheerleaders who advocate the full digitization of all microfinance services. Technological innovation is a great way to reach out to people where MFIs cannot go, they said, but the future will not be technology only – the human touch is crucial in serving low-income and vulnerable segments. Microfinance must find a way to integrate technology to reduce costs, improve efficiencies and provide opportunities for customers, while keeping client protection at the forefront. The panel agreed that client protection is more important than ever – indeed, this year the customary EMW stream on the topic involved a new focus on client protection and technology. Alongside this stream and the other 20+ sessions, the conference also focused, for at least the third straight year, on advancing access to financial services for refugees. Microfinance for refugees A two-part session stream presented the latest field research in servicing refugees and internally displaced persons. These communities face bottlenecks when accessing financial services, which extend to many fronts, including: bureaucratic and legal issues, often closely related to language; scepticism as to whether they are bankable and whether entrepreneurship is a suitable route to self-sufficiency for them; and a lack of a business models for MFIs, related to refugees’ lack of credit history or collateral and a fear they will move on. Moreover, refugee opportunities for entrepreneurship can be limited due to the economic situation in the host country. Yet research shows that refugees and wider migrant populations are bankable – they’re willing to pay for the financial services offered to them. A financial access eco-system for refugees has emerged in the last decade, but implementation in the field is limited to a few countries with large refugee populations, a favourable legal environment for service delivery and strong donor attention. From the financial service provider (FSP) perspective, serving refugees is complicated because of three constrains: reputation, legal and economic issues (e.g. in terms of public data), and a clear business case. Best practices to overcome these issues include: working with regulators and authorities on the business enabling environment, providing technical assistance to break through prejudices, getting buy-in at all levels of the FSP, offering de-risking products to FSPs initially, arranging meetings between FSPs and refugees, and compiling peer examples and data on refugee populations to demonstrate the business case. A final debate The conference ended with a new and unusual format, an “Oxford-style” plenary debate on the future relevance of smaller Tier 2 and 3 MFIs, which was streamed live and can be watched here. With Maria-Teresa Zappia from BlueOrchard Finance and Alex Silva from OMTRIX taking the Affirmative side, and Kaspar Wansleben from Luxembourg Microfinance Development Fund and consultant Maude Massu on the Negative, the teams debated the motion “This House Believes There’s No Room Left for the Little Guy.” In a lively, fun and unusually rule-based and competitive format, moderated by e-MFP’s Sam Mendelson and scored by a panel of judges, the two sides addressed issues such as the commercial viability of smaller institutions, the key elements of economies of scale and cheaper cost of capital that Tier 1 MFIs can offer and access, the key role smaller MFIs can play in offering non-financial services and supporting the lower-income segments, and their unique role in preparing clients for access to the mainstream financial services via Tier 1 MFIs and commercial banks. As “Team Negative” argued, the most important advantage of smaller MFIs is the fact that their social mission makes them ideally suited to ensure the inclusion of otherwise excluded populations, be they rural or remote, handicapped, migrants/refugees – or facing other impediments in accessing the financial products of larger institutions. In the end, the judges decided that the motion was rejected and the Negative team won – in other words, they agreed that there’s still room for smaller MFIs in the sector. Laura Hemrika, e-MFP’s chairwoman, closed the conference with a return to the central theme of technology, imploring MFIs to not be afraid of incoming fintechs, to partner and share knowledge, and to see technology as more than just a way to increase the efficiency of existing processes, but as an opportunity to re-make the financial experience for low-income clients.

  • Welcome to SPTF in Luxembourg!

    Author: e-MFP. The Luxembourg microfinance community has just added a new member – the Social Performance Task Force (SPTF) launched its European presence, headed by Jurgen Hammer in the House of Microfinance, Luxembourg. For us at e-MFP, this is a very welcome step! The Social Performance Task Force is a major force in the financial inclusion sector, having spent the past decade developing a range of standards and tools to measure the too-often overlooked second part of the double bottom line – standards and tools based on long-running consultations and input from practitioners, investors, and assessors. What SPTF has been doing is no less than developing the social equivalent of the accounting standards that emerged a century ago. But SPTF’s work goes further still. After all, while good accounting standards are aimed to accurately reflect an organisation’s assets, revenues and cash flow, they say relatively little, if anything, about its operations, let alone the client experience – a far greater challenge. The simultaneously meticulous and broad-based approach that SPTF has deployed over the years in developing its suite of social performance monitoring tools with its partners should be the standard for social investors generally, and not solely in financial inclusion. After all, regardless of intentions or motivations, it’s metrics that ultimately drive decisions. When investments are made on the basis of robust financial metrics and little more than feel-good social statements of intent, there should be little surprise that the resulting outcomes of such an ostensibly social investment strategy differ little from what a traditional investing strategy would produce. To be truly social, investors must be assured that the metrics used for both parts of the double-bottom line are equally consistent and robust. Luxembourg is a global center for impact and socially responsible investing, including in financial inclusion. SPTF opening its doors here will help greatly raise awareness of its work and the importance of robust social metrics among a far greater community of investors than has been possible to date. We welcome this development with open arms and look forward to taking our long-running collaboration with SPTF to new heights. And as we welcome SPTF, we raise our hats in appreciation to those who have made this important step possible – in particular the Luxembourg Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs. Wilkommen! Bienvenue! Welcome! Wëllkomm!

  • EMA 2019 Focuses on How Financial Inclusion Sector can Strengthen Resilience to Climate Change

    Author: e-MFP. It hardly needs saying that Climate Change represents the greatest issue we face today. Slowly – excruciatingly so – action is being taken at the macro level, reining in carbon emissions to attempt to keep global temperature increases within manageable levels. However, tacking Climate Change requires battles on many fronts, and not just on the mitigation side (minimising the actual Climate Change that takes place) but on the adaptation side too: how can we live in a world with a climate different to that we’ve had before? This is the challenge selected as the theme of the €100,000 European Microfinance Award 2019, which launches mid-March. Entitled “Strengthening Resilience to Climate Change”, it highlights the important role of the financial inclusion sector in increasing the resilience of low-income and financially excluded populations vulnerable to the effects of Climate Change. Being resilient is especially critical for these groups, which not only disproportionately earn livelihoods from activities most affected by Climate Change (especially agriculture, forestry and fisheries) but the countries and regions in which they live are also those which will be most affected, by flooding, drought, extreme storms, erosion, and pestilence. And many live in countries whose limited economic and institutional capacities already curb their ability to cope in the face of existing weather-related challenges, which Climate Change exacerbates. All these adverse effects may be multiplied by the growing risk of climate migration, displacing people to urban areas and across borders as refugees. Already, these climatic changes are occurring with greater frequency and intensity, increasing risks to health, livelihoods, food security, water supply and economic growth. Climate change impacts and responses are closely linked to both human rights and sustainable development, which balances social wellbeing, economic prosperity and environmental protection. The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) provide an established framework for assessing the links between global warming and development goals that include poverty eradication, reducing inequalities, and climate action. SDG13 explicitly mandates “urgent action to address climate change and its impacts,” including strengthening resilience and adaptive capacity to climate-related hazards; improving education, and human and institutional capacity. Although the challenge is daunting, there is an abundance of reasons to be positive. Within the agricultural, livestock, forestry and fisheries sectors, there is a broad range of emerging solutions, matched to the needs of vulnerable and low-income and financially excluded groups. What these solutions share is strengthening resilience. Resilient households adopt risk-reducing measures that help mitigate the catastrophic consequences of shocks; they demonstrate preparedness for future economic shocks; and they are able to smooth consumption without resorting to costly coping strategies, such as taking on unsustainable levels of debt or selling productive assets. But resilience to Climate Change goes beyond managing shocks. It also entails adapting to permanently changed environments, for example a reduction in rainwater, a shift in the seasons, or higher temperature extremes. In both cases, access to financial services can help households to adapt. Financial inclusion and climate change The financial inclusion sector has a hugely important role to play in addressing these challenges. In many cases, that means providing loans for working capital or investment in fixed assets; in other cases it is to support greater resilience to shocks, through products such as insurance; still more, it is to facilitate the long-term financial planning, including via savings products, needed to build more adaptable economic activities. Moreover, because institutions in this sector are embedded in the communities they serve, they too are often vulnerable to the effects of Climate Change. To build resilience among their clients, these institutions must also become resilient themselves. That means adapting to the changing economic situations of their clients (including their debt-repayment capacity), as well as building systems that allow for rapid and effective responses following weather disasters, such as floods or hurricanes. It may also mean integrating climate monitoring and forecasting technologies into both strategic and operational decision making. Finally, resilience may be pursued by complementing financial services with non-financial products and services, to fill capacity gaps through awareness-raising and capacity building concerning climate risks, such as technical assistance and training; developing standards that strengthen vulnerable populations’ resilience to Climate Change, and leveraging the opportunities of technology to lower costs, identifying and addressing sector-specific risks and barriers, forecasting extreme weather events and trends, conducting climate risk assessments, and providing information tools for climate risk screenings. Eligibility for The European Microfinance Award 2019 “Strengthening Resilience to Climate Change” The European Microfinance Award 2019 seeks to highlight organisations active in the financial inclusion sector that provide financial and non-financial products and services aimed at strengthening the resilience of vulnerable communities to the effects of Climate Change. The Award will look for initiatives that clearly respond to the problems caused by Climate Change, and demonstrate a proven or potential positive impact on the lives and livelihood of target groups. To be eligible, applicants are organisations active in the financial inclusion sector that play an integral role in the provision of financial (and, where relevant, also non-financial) products and services focused on strengthening Climate Change resilience within low income, vulnerable and excluded groups. While many applicants will directly provide financial products and services, those that do not directly provide them must play an integral and ongoing operational role in the project to be eligible. As always, eligible institutions have to be based and operate in a Least Developed Country, Low Income Country, Lower Middle Income Country or an Upper Middle Income Country as defined by the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) for ODA Recipients. Relevant products and services must be fully operational for at least one year, and eligible institutions must be able to provide audited financial statements. The application timeline, details of eligibility and more about the scope of the award can be found in the Explanatory Note that is published on the Award website in English, French and Spanish. European Microfinance Award 2019 Selection Process This year, and in response to feedback to a survey conducted by e-MFP last year, the selection process has changed a bit. There will be two application rounds: the first, which launches mid-March and closes on 9th April 2019, involves only a short application form and the provision of the audited financial statements, and will determine eligibility, innovation and relevance. Successful applicants will be invited to submit a more extensive application form by the end of May 2019 – with the exact date TBC. Both rounds will be evaluated by a Preselection Committee, before going to a larger Selection Committee of financial inclusion and Climate Change experts who will choose 7-10 semi-finalists and three finalists. A High Jury will choose the winner and the €100,000 prize will be presented on 21st November 2019 in the framework of the European Microfinance Week in Luxembourg. We’re very pleased and excited to be launching the 2019 Award, and we invite all organisations working to increase the resilience of low-income groups to climate change to apply. We also ask and encourage any e-MFP members or other sector stakeholders to share this with your contacts and draw the attention of this Award to potential applicants. Keep a close eye on the e-MFP and Award website, and good luck! Pour des informations sur le Prix et la procédure de présentation des candidatures en français, consultez le site du Prix Consulte el sitio web del Premio para la versión española de la información sobre el Premio y el proceso de presentación de candidaturas Photo: ©IFAD/Amadou Keita

  • Ten Editions of the European Microfinance Award: 2012 Winner - ASKI, The Philippines

    Author: e-MFP. 2019 marks ten editions of the European Microfinance Award, launched in 2005 by the Luxembourg Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs, as a biennial Award – the first of which took place in 2006, and after considerable interest and exposure, became annual after 2014. The Award serves two parallel goals: rewarding excellence, and collecting and disseminating the most relevant practices for replication by others. The Award’s influence and prestige has grown, and its €100,000 prize for the winner (and €10,000 for the runners-up), attracts applications from many organisations that are innovating in a particular area of financial inclusion. As well as the significant prize, an important additional benefit to winners is the exposure that they receive, and the opportunities for expansion and replication that the attention of the sector can provide. To celebrate ten editions of the Award, e-MFP has decided to reach out to the previous winners, for a ‘where are they now?’ blog series, published in the order we receive them throughout 2019, to look at what they have been doing with their initiative since they won, and how the winning of the Award has helped, and what plans they have in store. In 2012, the theme of the Award was Microfinance for Food Security, focusing on microfinance initiatives that contribute to improving food production and distribution conditions in developing countries. Alalay Sa Kaunlaran Inc. (ASKI) of The Philippines won for serving smallholder farmers and fostering effective market linkages. Its initiative presented for the 4th European Microfinance Award focused on increasing the small farmers' productivity through financing, market linkages and capacity building program. It consisted of providing microcredit, technical assistance and insurance to small farmers, and sustained market linkages to private sector enterprises. The initiative enhanced knowledge and productivity of small farmers and helped beneficiaries increase their yield, produce good quality harvests, and reduce postharvest losses because of adequate infrastructure and proper use of adapted techniques. e-MFP: How has your initiative evolved since you received the Award? What have been the biggest changes? ASKI: Since we won the Award in 2012, ASKI continued and further strengthened our efforts to reach poor communities and bring programs and projects with genuine impact to the underserved agriculture sector in the Philippines. As we’ve developed our initiatives that increase food security since winning the Award, ASKI’s networks, stakeholders and partners have entrusted different community development programs through the ASKI Foundation. It has also bolstered its expansion program that made the delivery of its services more efficient and accessible to clients. As of the end of 2018, ASKI Microfinance is serving more than 113,000 clients providing about P1.8 billion (USD 34.5 million) in livelihood development loans. Alongside this is a microinsurance program that reaches almost 250,000 households, covering 700,000 people. Our agricultural loan program supports around 19,000 farmers via a P524 million (USD 9.8 million) portfolio. Aside from our existing loan products and services, ASKI also offers a Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) Program with loans to help poor households access modern toilets and clean water, and Green Energy Loans to buy solar-powered lighting products that cater for communities without grid electricity. So far, the GEL program has more than 1,300 clients benefitting 7,000 individuals and is now being rolled-out in 78 ASKI offices in Central and Northern Philippines as part of our commitment to provide affordable and clean energy. Winning the Award had immediate direct benefits for our clients. With the prize money, more than 7,000 individuals benefitted from different products, including multi-commodity solar drying pavements, dual threshing machines for rice and corn, hand tractor threshing machines, a farmer entrepreneurship program, a farmers’ field school, community health sessions for TB prevention, tree planting, and various other smaller projects to benefit poor rural clients. e-MFP: What did winning the Award mean to your organization? Did anything change as a result of winning, both within the specific initiative for which you won and in the organisation more broadly? ASKI: Winning the Award has inspired ASKI to carry out more initiatives that will help poor families improve their lives and livelihoods. ASKI considered the award a privilege but also a responsibility, to promote social change to neglected communities under the spotlight of many observers in the financial inclusion sector. The Award also helped ASKI’s initiatives gain recognition not just locally but also internationally, which has really helped us solidify our partnerships with different networks and stakeholders. Since then, ASKI has been implementing WASH and Men at Work programs in partnership with Wholistic Transformation and Resource Center and the Livelihood for Extreme Poor Program and Community Impact Fund for Community Development Projects, funded by Opportunity International (Australia). ASKI has also strengthened its partnership with the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA), a government agency certifying technical-vocational courses among the youth, and the agriculture and livestock program at the ASKI Training Institute is now awaiting approval from TESDA. Having the accreditation will enable us to become a certified training center not only in the local province but nationally. Finally, to empower SMEs, ASKI is now working with Lanka Orix Leasing Corporation based in Sri Lanka to invest in our SME operation, known as the ASKI-LOLC Finance, Inc. With the enactment of the Microfinance NGO Act, all loans above P300,000 (USD 5,800) will be transferred to this new SME entity, which focuses on the particular needs of these clients that have graduated from microfinance and are expanding their businesses. e-MFP: Are you aware of any impact your initiative has had on other organisations? ASKI: ASKI’s value chain program for farmer-beneficiaries has become one of the models in the agriculture sector. In various local and international conferences, ASKI has been invited to present the best practices of our initiative. Similarly, we have become one of the institutions regularly considered for exposure visits by international organisations. Our program has also been noted by Agricultural Credit Policy Council and has introduced it to its agriculture projects in the country. So we are pleased that the exposure from winning the Award has meant the lessons we have learned can be absorbed for replication elsewhere. e-MFP: What do you see in the future for your initiative and for this area of practice more generally? ASKI: ASKI will continue bringing its initiatives that improve food security to its farmer clients. ASKI is hoping to build more formal farmers’ cooperatives to maximize their capacity to produce and prosper as well – which have already been done for farmer groups involved in rice, onion, ginger, and cassava production. ASKI is looking forward to new partners and funders to support its programs to help the agriculture sector of the country. The European Microfinance Award is jointly organised by the Luxembourg Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs, the European Microfinance Platform (e-MFP) and the Inclusive Finance Network Luxembourg (InFiNe.lu). For more information on the 2019 Award on "Strengthening resilience to climate change" , visit the Award website (closing date is 9th April).

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