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The Jubilee Initiative for Financial Inclusion

Explore the impact of poverty and payday loans, evaluate microfinance alternatives, and discuss the JiFFi solution. Address payday loan user demographics, benefits, and problems. Analyze the power dynamics and impact of microfinance, comparing international examples and domestic success/failure. Examine existing alternatives to payday loans, such as the South Side Community Federal Credit Union and GoodMoney, for a sustainable financial future.

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The Jubilee Initiative for Financial Inclusion

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  1. The Jubilee Initiative for Financial Inclusion Spring 2012 Evaluation Meeting

  2. Agenda • Presentation • Poverty & Payday Loans • Microfinance & Alternatives • The JiFFi Solution? • Further Questions & Challenges • Immediate Plans • Critique & Discussion

  3. Methodology • Existing Literature • Center for Responsible Lending • Filene Research Institute • Reports and Papers • Conversations • Professors • Community leaders • Community members

  4. Poverty & Payday Loans (PDLs) Consideration of Poverty & PDLs What is a PDL? Who uses PDLs? How are PDLs beneficial? Why might PDLs be problematic?

  5. Cycle of Poverty

  6. Is It Our Problem? • What does poverty mean for the community? • Stints in human potential • Wastes resources • Hurts the economy • A sustainable community mustwork tobreak the cycle of poverty

  7. Poverty  Payday Loans • Poverty is not just an economic class, but a job in itself • People have learned to manage poverty • The cycle of poverty cannot be broken if it is being managed! • Using payday lenders to • Buy extra appliances • Loan money to friends and family • Pay off a bill

  8. Payday Loans (PDL)

  9. User Demographics • Average Age: 38 • Median Income: $25,000 - $30,000 • 42% homeowners • 84% high school graduates • Minorities and the lower working-class • African-American neighborhoods have three times as many payday lending stores per capita… • 5.5 per 10,000 households working-class neighborhoods vs. 3.4 per 10,000 in poor neighborhoods Center for American Progress, Who Borrows from Payday Lenders?

  10. Brick and Mortar Payday Stores

  11. Bank Payday Loans

  12. Stores in South Bend • Check Into Cash • Cashland • Advance America • Cash Plus • Checksmart • Personal Finance Co. • Check ‘n Go

  13. Benefits • Responsive to emergency situations • Accessible location and time • Speedy underwriting process • Tolerates tarnished credit • No credit check • Does not show up on credit reports

  14. Problems • The Hook • “Convenience” • Emergencies • Lack of alternatives • The Juggle • Expensive balloon payment • 391% APR • 44% ultimately default • 12 million Americans trapped Center for Responsible Lending; Interviews

  15. Problems • Loan leads to dependence on more loans • Average borrower has 9 repeat loans/yr Center for Responsible Lending

  16. Power Dynamics • How can we • Recapture value in the exchange? • Be approachable but professional? • Locate ourselves to allow privacy? Interview

  17. Impact Summary Center for Responsible Lending, Bureau of Labor Statistics, US Census Bureau

  18. Microfinance What is microfinance? How and why does it work internationally? Does it work domestically? Is JiFFi a microfinance organization?

  19. Microfinance • Umbrella term that incorporates many services • The provision of financial services to: • Underprivileged • Micro-entrepreneurs • Small businesses • Lack access to traditional financial services • Due to high transaction costs associated with serving these client categories

  20. International Example: Kiva • Non-profit organization • Connects people through lending worldwide via the internet • Goal of alleviating poverty

  21. International Example: Grameen Bank • Helps the world's poorest improve their lives and escape poverty • Especially women • Provides the poor access to • small loans • essential information • viable business opportunities

  22. International Example: ACCION • Provides management services, investment, and governance support to help build institutions worldwide that are sustainable • Currently 62 in 31 countries • Franchise model

  23. Domestic Success & Failure

  24. Demographics • Rural Arkansas is vastly different than Boston • South Bend is somewhere in the middle • South Bend is home to diverse population • 24.8% Black; 11.0% Hispanic, 2.3% Mixed • Can we harness the community to build a successful model like that of international organizations? • SJC Bridges out of Poverty participants’ cohesion a great example City-data.com

  25. Is JiFFi a Microfinance Organization? “Having the opportunity to earn a little more cash by starting some kind of business is perceived by many of the poor as not worth the risk or effort.” - Richard Taub • Not quite, but focus on: • Trust-basedrelationships rather than transactional ones • Financial education • Building credit • Investments for the future • Not just consumption • Future plans for micro-venturing arm

  26. Existing Alternatives to PDL South Side Community Federal Credit Union GoodMoney ZestCash Others

  27. South Side Community Federal Credit Union • Payday Alternative Loans (+) • $200 - $1000; 15% • Terms from 1 to 6 months • Free credit building & financial education classes • Challenges • Requires membership • Low volume Interview

  28. GoodMoney • Collaboration between Prospera Credit Union & Goodwill stores • Short-term loans • half the rates payday lenders • Other banking services • Referrals to the Financial Information and Service Center (FISC)*

  29. ZestCash • Founded by former CIO of Google • Features user tailored loans • For-profit, very expensive • High fees • Compound interest

  30. Other • Banks & Credit Unions • Option usually exhausted • Personal Finance Companies • Similar steep fees • Family & Friends • Potential negative social implications • Only 5% consider this alternative Caskey, Economics of Payday Lending

  31. The JiFFi Solution? What are the lessons? What are the goals to achieve? What should a JiFFi loan look like?

  32. The Necessity of Education • Poverty • Stability “You can’t tell them to be clean if they don’t know what clean is!”

  33. Class Perspectives • Necessary to understand • Each social class has its own habits • Habits determine what drives actions: what is the motivation? The final goal?

  34. Hidden Rules From Bridges Out of Poverty, TerieDreussi Smith, 2012

  35. To break the cycle… • Understand the perspective of each individual • Value the dignity of everyone that comes in and maintain the relationship • Treat every individual as an individual • Work towards getting out of a cycle instead of trying to temporarily manage it

  36. Ingredients for Success • Emergencies happen • Nudge factor • Vision of possibilities • Trading “rules” • Clients’ long term success • Client sets financial goals • Provideaccountability

  37. Comprehensive Service

  38. Product Snapshot

  39. Achieve Multiple Goals Value Dignity Business Social

  40. Further Questions & Challenges What are some social challenges? What are some business problems? We need your help!

  41. Social Challenges • “Invisible” target market • Root of the problem runs deep and wide • Complexity of poverty • Bridging the gap between ND students and rest of the community

  42. Business Challenges • Complex business with heated competition • Payday lenders advertise ferociously • High risk • Difficulties in delivery • Requires costly overhead & hours • Student pool talented but busy • How to frame incentives?

  43. South Bend Household Budget Est. Indiana Business Review

  44. Business Problem ($)

  45. Business Problem

  46. Business Problem • Simplistic & optimistic estimate • Overall loss of $(8,332) in the first year • 2014 full capacity overall income of $2,800

  47. We Need Your Help! • Academic assistance • Data collection & impact evaluation • Legal support • Business plan generation • Student & faculty involvement • Human capital intensive – student groups • Board of advisors – faculty and other leaders • Local cooperation • Complex problems; help from local organizations • Input and support from local government

  48. Immediate Plans What are we going to do in the Summer and Fall?

  49. Plans • Summer • Personal research and development • Summer programs & internships • Acquaint with community • Fall • Re-evaluate purpose, model, team • McCloskey Business Plan Competition • Test products

  50. Video

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