what are microfinance institutions and are they good or bad?

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I’ve been googleing but I’m trying to pull myself out of a rabbit hole. I don’t see these institutions prominent in my country – where are they? And the pros and cons of them seem to be in theory? Like there aren’t news stories accompanying them

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Microfinance is when you make loans of far smaller dollar amounts than any normal bank would be interested in making. For example, if you need $100 to buy materials for your shirtmaking business, you would struggle to find a bank that would make that loan. Microlenders step in to fill that gap.

They aren’t really “good” or “bad” – the just have pros and cons. They are able to get folks otherwise cut out of the finance sector access to loans, but as with all loans, they can trap people in debt cycles an some lenders are abusive.

Anonymous 0 Comments

They had a lot of press quite a long time ago. Thinking perhaps 20-25 years ago. At the time, IIRC, they focused on (very) small loans mostly to allow the very poor to start a small business – which could be selling food or making simple products and services.

This was a long time ago, so not so useful perhaps to you. The idea was to allow the development of these micro/home businesses and give economic empowerment especially to women. If done well, it can help alleviate some degree of poverty. Done poorly, it becomes another debt problem.

Anonymous 0 Comments

If u mean for the purposes of international development, I think they are generally at least somewhat good or break even. Ideally it is an extra option for people to have access to capital investment. I don’t know much about how it is/might be abused, however.

I looked into them as retirement vehicles in 2021 and was unable to find one that really gave any non-negligible returns, which is a shame cause while not purely altruistic, it would likely get lots more interest from people who have trouble both saving and giving.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Microfinance starts from the idea that poor people, particularly those in poor countries, want to be entrepreneurial. They need small amounts of money to start businesses, expand them or make them more efficient, and can get big returns from small investments. Even households could save money through small investments (like a more efficient stove).

Mainstream financial institutions aren’t interested in loaning such small amounts to people with few assets and no credit history. Small local lenders tend to be effectively loan sharks, charging very high interest and operating in very questionably ways. So it’s hard for these people to get the finance they want.

That’s where microfinance banks came in, specialising in this kind of small loan to poor people.

It was a big idea in development circles in the 2000s. There were lots of stories of great business successes, high repayment rates, and a development initiative that didn’t need subsidies.

Unfortunately it turned out there were lots of problems. The posterchild for the movement, Grameen Bank, was shown to be hiding subsidies. Interest rates were often as high as loan sharks would charge. Loans ended up being used not for investment but for consumption. And many business success stories turned out only to apply to the first mover.

So, for example, the first business in a town to get a mobile phone might be really successful and have no trouble repaying a loan. But the second and third would be less successful, and before long competition would push down profits, making high-interest loans impossible to pay off.

I’m not quite sure what state microfinance is in now. It’s still going, but I think it’s contracted a lot and doesn’t get the same hype. I’d guess some lenders and governments are accepting the need for subsidies, while also being more selective about who they lend money to.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Basically, they make smaller loans to higher risk ventures/people. Therefore, they tend to have worse conditions and interest rates

Anonymous 0 Comments

Microlending is generally found in very low income developing countries, especially in Africa. When you think microloans, usually think poor areas of Africa

These are places that give small loans, because the value of them is relatively high in very low in come areas. They would usually be about $100-$200, yup, thats it. That may seem like nothing to many people, but in low income areas, that can be a lot of money, and can be enough to help people do disporportiatly large things, such as starting a whole business or expanding theirs. $200 can a be a lot of money in poor communities in Afirca. — Many of these loans also go to women entrepreneurs as well, which for some places in the world, it is much more difficult for women to start businesses, so this helps bridge that gap too

Microloans are viewed as an inexpensive way to provide a lot of benefit to these people who need just a little money to make a difference, not a lot, and their rate of repayment is generally very high. They’ve been quite a success, but they simply aren’t that sexy and don’t get a lot of media attention

Anonymous 0 Comments

At the beginning, the people applying were very carefully screened to make sure the loan would be used to start a small business.

Then after they started to get more popular, more people got loans, used them like a credit card to buy things, and simply had no way of paying them back. Some people even got a loan simply because it was a status symbol. So they are becoming more of a debt trap. They can be dangerous.

The devil is in the details. What is the approval process, and how many of the loans are paid back on time?