1 / 18

Philippines April 24 th to May 5 th 2005

Debriefing Philippines Savings Assessment. Philippines April 24 th to May 5 th 2005. Brigit Helms, Rani Deshpande, Isabel Dauner 5 May 2005, Manila. CGAP’s Savings Initiative. Goal: gather, generate, and disseminate knowledge about small-balance savings mobilization

zeno
Download Presentation

Philippines April 24 th to May 5 th 2005

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DebriefingPhilippines Savings Assessment PhilippinesApril 24th to May 5th 2005 Brigit Helms, Rani Deshpande, Isabel Dauner 5 May 2005, Manila

  2. CGAP’s Savings Initiative • Goal: gather, generate, and disseminate knowledge about small-balance savings mobilization • Client-level impact research • Work with institutions • Case studies • Analysis of constraints and opportunities at country level • Savings Information and Resource Center

  3. The Philippines assessment Macro Level Legislation, Regulation, Supervision Meso Level Support Services & Infrastructure Micro Level Financial Service Providers Clients • Methodology • Secondary research • Team of four people • Interviews with 60+ persons • Focus groups with donor agencies and bankers

  4. Do Filipinos save? Clients • Skepticism about savings culture • Consumption orientation • Use of credit • Unfamiliarity/intimidation re: financial services and institutions • YET… • Evidence of savings capacity among low-income people • Limited market surveys & research • Informal savings mechanisms • Numbers games • Remittances

  5. Evidence of latent demand Clients

  6. Landscape of deposit takers Micro

  7. Proximity is key, but not enough Micro • Regulated FIs have better coverage in wealthier areas • WHILE… • More accessible institutions often weaker • Insufficient regulation: coops and NGOs • Uneven governance and management: C/N • Rural banks, coops, and NGOs not networked

  8. Lack of incentives dampens innovation Micro • Consequences • Limited market research • Inappropriate products • “Liquidity squeeze” • Plenty of deposits through low hanging fruit • Credit lines easier to access than small savings • Limited investment options • Perceived high cost • of mobilizing small savings • But little evidence of systematic product costing

  9. Associations/projects AIMS BAP CUES MABS MCP NATCCO PFCC RBAP Chamber of Thrift Banks Activities Coaching Monitoring Training Networking Liquidity management Rating & benchmarking Technical support Delinquency management New product development Financial management Associations/projects bolster capacity Meso

  10. Easy money flooding the market Meso • Progress on directed credit program (DCP) rationalization, • BUT… • Reports of 37 government agencies implementing 90 subsidized credit lines • Difficult to understand full range of programs, terms • Program loans have close to market rates, • BUT… • May not fulfill intended purpose • May not be necessary

  11. Incomplete financial infrastructure Meso • For rural banks & coops – • Liquidity management • Mechanisms missing • Exceptions include NATCCO Central Fund, lending between rural banks • Liquidity placements subject to SBL • Increases complexity, cost • No direct links to payment system • Cannot capture remittances and internal transfers • Clients’ access limited to certain geographical area

  12. Technology revolutionizing access? Meso • ATMs • More than 5,500 nationwide • Increase by over 650 units in 2nd half of 2004 • Plans for expansion among rural banks • Cell phones • Could they bypass traditional payments system altogether?

  13. Policy approach favorable but flawed Macro • Policy endorsement and tiered banking structure encourage commercial microfinance • BUT… • Regulatory void for institutions closest to clients • Operational restrictions may limit access and encourage evasion • Branching moratorium • Off-site deposit taking • Bureaucracy slows entry into new markets • AML/”Know Your Customer” rules exclude poor clients

  14. 9 Suggestions • Collect more data on client savings patterns & preferences • Expand financial literacy efforts for residents, leveraging OFW experience • Institutionalize & expand successful technical assistance programs on a sustainable basis • Evaluate alternative e-payments options (ATMs, cell phones, EPCS, etc.) • Build on and rationalize rating systems to enhance performance and client confidence • PESOS, FOCCUS, FIRM, ACCESS, EAGLE For RBs & coops

  15. 9 Suggestions • Encourage specialization of savings & credit cooperatives, consolidation of federations; strengthen supervision @ CDA and/or delegated models • Continue phasing out DCPs; determine whether program loans fulfill purpose and are necessary • Shift regulatory framework from operational controls towards risk-based supervision • Update national microfinance policy to reconfirm commitment to market-based approach and offer guidance on other financial services, including savings

  16. Next steps • Draft report: circulate for comments early June • Final report: circulate by early July • Further tests: Benin (July) and Bosnia (September) • Mini-tests: Bangladesh, South Africa, Uganda • Country Savings Assessment Tool: early 2006 • All information housed on Savings Information & Resource Center (SIRC)

  17. Savings Information & Resource Center www.cgap.org/savings

  18. UNCDF Building Inclusive Financial Systems Haraming Salamat Po!

More Related