Tuesday, June 2, 2015

3 Types of Micro Finance Institutions-By Ojijo Pascal

3 Types of Micro Finance Institutions

(Extracted from Ojijo’s Successful Saccos - Managers' Guide to Acquire, Retain and Grow Membership, Savings and Assets & Ojijo's Financial Services Law Handbook.)

Microfinance is the provision of financial services to low-income people. It refers to a movement that envisions a world where low-income households have permanent access to high-quality and affordable financial services to finance income-producing activities, build assets, stabilize consumption, and protect against risks.

Initially the term was closely associated with microcredit—very small loans to unsalaried borrowers with little or no collateral—but the term has since evolved to include a range of financial products, such as savings, insurance, payments, and remittances. Poor people need many kinds of financial products and services and there is a growing range of organizations working to reach them with savings, insurance, transfers, and credit services.

Microfinance institutions are legally registered entities which work to develop products and deliver methods to meet the diverse financial needs of low-income people. For example, unlike other forms of lending, microcredit loans use methodologies such as group lending and liability, pre-loan savings requirements, and the gradually increase in loan sizes to evaluate clients’ credit worthiness.

Microfinance institutions can be classified into three major categories, namely:
1.      Village Savings and Loans Associations/Village Banks:
2.      Cooperatives (Savings and Credit Cooperative Societies (saccos) & Multi Purpose Cooperatives)
3.      Micro Deposit Taking Institutions (MDIS)

However, in addition to traditional operators, such as microfinance institutions, credit unions, cooperatives, and banks, other entities, including mobile network operators, are using technology to develop new delivery methods to bring these services to the poor, sometimes in partnership with existing financial institutions.

Village Savings and Loans Associations/Village Banks

Village banking is a microcredit methodology whereby financial services are administered locally rather than centralized in a formal bank.

A village bank is an informal self-help support group of 20-30 members, predominantly female heads-of-household.

The members, mostly women, meet once a week in the home of one of their members to avail themselves of working capital loans, a safe place to save, skill training, mentoring, and motivation. Loans normally start at $50–$100 and are linked to savings such that the more a client saves the more she can borrow. The normal loan period is four months and is repaid in weekly installments.

They are run by non-governmental organizations, registered as such, or as companies limited by guarantee. They can also be branches of mainstream commercial or retail banks

To eliminate the need for collateral (the poor man's obstacle to receiving bank loans), village banks rely on a variation of the solidarity lending methodology. It relies on a system of cross-guarantees, where each member of a village bank ensures the loan of every other member. This system gives rise to an atmosphere of social pressure within the village bank, where the cost of social embarrassment motivates bank members to repay their loans in full. The admixture of cross-guarantees and social pressure makes it possible for even the poorest people to receive loans.

Village banks are highly democratic, self-managed, grassroots organizations. They elect their own leaders, select their own members, create their own bylaws, do their own bookkeeping, manage all funds, disburse and deposit all funds, resolve loan delinquency problems, and levy their own fines on members who come late, miss meetings, or fall behind in their payments.

Market interest rates apply to village bank loans. The village bank itself will usually mark up this rate when it on-lends to individual members. While these rates seem high, they are low compared to those charged by local moneylenders in most countries. Unlike rural banks and credit unions these microfinance institutions do not provide savings services directly to their clients.

Like with other micro finance institutions such as saccos, small loans are more expensive to process than large ones because they take longer to process. Without employment history or collateral, microfinance loans require a more hands-on, time-intensive assessment to determine creditworthiness. Microfinance institutions (MFIs) usually send a representative to visit the client as part of this process, making the process even more challenging and costly in remote or sparsely populated areas. Once a loan is approved, MFIs often send loan officers to disburse loans and collect payments in person, which also adds significant expense when compared with the way traditional banks operate. MFIs have to charge rates that are higher than normal banking rates to cover their costs and keep the service available.

Micro Deposit Taking Institutions (MDIS)

MDI is an institution regulated by the central bank to take deposits and offer other banking services. They have reduced capital requirements, as opposed to commercial or retail banks.  MDIs are allowed to take deposits from the public and on-lend these. They are classified as Tier II institutions. The main activities of MDIs as the taking of time deposits or savings from the public and their employment in lending, which can be and is interpreted as the exemption of deposits from members. Micro Finance Deposit-Taking Institutions (MDI) Regulations address 1) licensing, 2) liquidity and funds management, 3) capital adequacy, 4) asset quality, 5) reporting for microfinance deposit-taking institutions and 6) list of restricted activities.

Ojijo Pascal

Ojijo is the Founder & Lead at GoBigHub.com, the solution to the ever present cry for youth that they lack capital for doing business. GoBigHub creates provides a monthly meeting entrepreneurs to meet and pitch to local institutional and individual investors, as well as business coaching, office space, and online crowdfunding platform. GoBigHub is leading the move away from grants, promoting trade, not aid, by offering African entrepreneurs a chance to get equity funding, with board positions, transparency, and scrutiny to make sure businesses funded are scalable, and hence, profitably sustainable.

Ojijo has also worked extensively with collective investment schemes generally (namely, investment clubs and cooperatives), as a consultant on financial literacy, legal advisory, strategic planning, and leadership dynamics.  In this area, he has also authored two leading texts on collective investment schemes, with one on Cooperatives, Successful Cooperatives - Managers' Guide to Acquire, Retain and Grow Membership, Savings and Assets and one on investment clubs, Making Money Together - Ojijo's Investments Club Manual. He sits in bank of Uganda Financial Literacy Advisory Group/ Financial Literacy Sharing Group (FLISG), and is a co-founder of Uganda Ministry of Finance sponsored committee of Champions promoting Investment clubs, Investment Clubs Association of Uganda-ICAU. He has helped in the training and or setting up of various cooperatives, including ministry of foreign affairs cooperative; finance ministry cooperative; NEMA; NARO; Gender Ministry cooperative, and Nsamizi Institute cooperative (Mpigi), to name but a few.

Ojijo is also a lawyer and guest lecturer in Financial Services Law, ICT Law, Legal Rhetoric and Law Firm Management; and a communications expert specializing in strategic planning, public speaking, and writing skills.  He has worked with various clients including ministry of finance (Uganda); Bank of Uganda; Ministry of Gender; Technoserve; AIESEC; AYDL; UMYDF; CCEDU; PEDN; Foundation for Human Rights; several universities, companies, and individuals on personal branding, financial literacy, business coaching, and entrepreneurship.

Ojijo is an author of 51 books; Inua Kijana Fellow; Performance Poet’ Armature Pianist; and entrepreneur owner of luopedia.com,  lawpronto.com,  naniwapi.com, gobighub.com, allpublicspeakers.com,  bankitgroup.com, and achibela.com.

M: +256776100059. E: ojijo@allpublicspeakers.com


How To Register A Micro Finance Deposit Taking Institution (MDI) in Uganda


(Extracted from Ojijo’s Successful Saccos - Managers' Guide to Acquire, Retain and Grow Membership, Savings and Assets & Ojijo's Financial Services Law Handbook.)


Microfinance is the provision of financial services to low-income people. It refers to a movement that envisions a world where low-income households have permanent access to high-quality and affordable financial services to finance income-producing activities, build assets, stabilize consumption, and protect against risks.
Microfinance institutions are legally registered entities which work to develop products and deliver methods to meet the diverse financial needs of low-income people. For example, unlike other forms of lending, microcredit loans use methodologies such as group lending and liability, pre-loan savings requirements, and the gradually increase in loan sizes to evaluate clients’ credit worthiness.
Microfinance institutions can be classified into three major categories, namely:
1.       Village Savings and Loans Associations/Village Banks:
2.       Cooperatives (Savings and Credit Cooperative Societies (saccos) & Multi-Purpose Cooperatives)
3.       Micro Deposit Taking Institutions (MDIS)

However, in addition to traditional operators, such as microfinance institutions, credit unions, cooperatives, and banks, other entities, including mobile network operators, are using technology to develop new delivery methods to bring these services to the poor, sometimes in partnership with existing financial institutions.

Cooperatives (Savings and Credit Cooperative Societies (Saccos) & Multi-Purpose Cooperatives)

Cooperatives, either registered as savings and credit cooperatives (SACCOS), or multi-purpose cooperatives, are the most common forms of micro finance institutions.
They are groups of people, not less than 30, who come together to save, access credit, and in case of multi-purpose cooperatives, to engage in various businesses, for their welfare.
The process of registering a cooperative include:
§  Step 1: Reserve a name, with the registrar of business names;
§  Step 2: Purchase cooperative by-law books from the department of cooperatives. The by-laws vary depending on whether the cooperative is a sacco, or a multi-purpose cooperative;
§  Step 3: Fill the by-laws with names and contact details of the promoters, who should number at least 30;
§  Step 4: Fill the by-laws with the details of shares amounts, disciplinary fees, business address, and related issues on management of the cooperative;
§  Step 5: Submit documents to the district or area cooperatives officer for approval. This includes signed by-laws by all members and incase the members are more than the space provided in the by-laws, attach the full member list; financial statements of the society (Income and Expenditure +Balance Sheet); a comprehensive schedule of all shareholders showing shares held by each member; entrance fees, shares, savings, and loans if any; and photographs of respective people to handle the cooperative's accounts, that is, Chairman, Secretary, and Treasurer.
§  Step 6: On approval of documents, which may include the cooperatives officer attending a meeting of the cooperative, the cooperative will pay registration fees.
§  Step 7: Get a certificate of registration of the cooperative.  With this certificate, the cooperative should open a bank account, and deposit the funds you have to the bank account; get a business license from the city council authority, or local government authority; and start active recruitment of members.

It is advisable to use a consultant, as the process can be long winded. The consultant will cost approximately USD. 2,500, and the entire process can take upto 2 months to set up. Apart from consultancy costs, the approximate costs of establishing a branch, with operational equipment’s, stat up capital, and working capital, is projected at USD. 50,000.

Village Savings and Loans Associations/Village Banks

Village banking is a microcredit methodology whereby financial services are administered locally rather than centralized in a formal bank.
A village bank is an informal self-help support group of 20-30 members, predominantly female heads-of-household.
The members, mostly women, meet once a week in the home of one of their members to avail themselves of working capital loans, a safe place to save, skill training, mentoring, and motivation. Loans normally start at $50–$100 and are linked to savings such that the more a client saves the more she can borrow. The normal loan period is four months and is repaid in weekly installments.
They are run by non-governmental organizations, registered as such, or as companies limited by guarantee. They can also be branches of mainstream commercial or retail banks
To eliminate the need for collateral (the poor man's obstacle to receiving bank loans), village banks rely on a variation of the solidarity lending methodology. It relies on a system of cross-guarantees, where each member of a village bank ensures the loan of every other member. This system gives rise to an atmosphere of social pressure within the village bank, where the cost of social embarrassment motivates bank members to repay their loans in full. The admixture of cross-guarantees and social pressure makes it possible for even the poorest people to receive loans.
Village banks are highly democratic, self-managed, grassroots organizations. They elect their own leaders, select their own members, create their own bylaws, do their own bookkeeping, manage all funds, disburse and deposit all funds, resolve loan delinquency problems, and levy their own fines on members who come late, miss meetings, or fall behind in their payments.
Market interest rates apply to village bank loans. The village bank itself will usually mark up this rate when it on-lends to individual members. While these rates seem high, they are low compared to those charged by local moneylenders in most countries. Unlike rural banks and credit unions these microfinance institutions do not provide savings services directly to their clients.
Like with other micro finance institutions such as saccos, small loans are more expensive to process than large ones because they take longer to process. Without employment history or collateral, microfinance loans require a more hands-on, time-intensive assessment to determine creditworthiness. Microfinance institutions (MFIs) usually send a representative to visit the client as part of this process, making the process even more challenging and costly in remote or sparsely populated areas. Once a loan is approved, MFIs often send loan officers to disburse loans and collect payments in person, which also adds significant expense when compared with the way traditional banks operate. MFIs have to charge rates that are higher than normal banking rates to cover their costs and keep the service available.
Village banks are registered as non-governmental organizations, or as associations, with district commercial officers. 
The process of registering a district association is clear and forward, and involves the group visiting a district commercial officer, who will give them a form to fill their names, and then, they can choose to open a group bank account with any bank, and start operations.
The process of registering an NGO is a long winded process, which involves the following:
1.       Name reservation at registrar of companies;
2.       Getting recommendation letters from LC1, LC2, LC3, RDC, Line ministries, law firm, one already operational NGO, district NGO supervisory committee, and an individual.
3.       Submitting the above, together with application letter for registration, constitution, one year plan of operations, report of operations (if already operational), budget, organization structure, sources of funding, and membership minutes to register the NGO, in three copies of files, to the NGO board.
4.       The NGO board meets once a month, and will approve (mostly, very few rejections), the operations.
It is good to use a consultant, as the process can be long winded. The consultant will cost approximately USD. 4,500, and the entire process can take upto 3 months. Apart from consultancy costs, the approximate costs of establishing a branch, with operational equipment’s, stat up capital, and working capital, is projected at USD. 30,000.

Micro Deposit Taking Institutions (MDIS)

MDI is an institution regulated by the central bank to take deposits and offer other banking services. They have reduced capital requirements, as opposed to commercial or retail banks.  MDIs are allowed to take deposits from the public and on-lend these. They are classified as Tier II institutions. The main activities of MDIs as the taking of time deposits or savings from the public and their employment in lending, which can be and is interpreted as the exemption of deposits from members. Micro Finance Deposit-Taking Institutions (MDI) Regulations address 1) licensing, 2) liquidity and funds management, 3) capital adequacy, 4) asset quality, 5) reporting for microfinance deposit-taking institutions and 6) list of restricted activities.
MDIs are registered first as a legal entity, either as non-governmental organizations, as companies limited by shares, or as companies limited by guarantee (foundations).
Then the company seeks to get license to operate as a micro finance deposit taking (MDI) organization, by submitting the following:
1.       CVs and Profiles of proposed directors (who must have not been convicted of financial impropriety, or financial fraud.
2.       Statement of applicant’s relevant experience in micro finance business. Though this is not a determining factor, indicating experience of directors is key.
3.       Business plan for the organization.
4.       Scope of operations, to include services to be offered, area of operation, and related activities.
5.       Proposed staff development programs, with clear explanations of how staff skills and expertise will be developed.
6.       Management and administration, including capacity of the proposed senior management.
7.       Evidence of applicant’s ability to provide adequate capital through retained earnings. (Through business financial projections of P&L and Cashflows).
8.       Evidence of applicant’s ability to meet the statutory minimum paid up capital, and minimum ongoing capital adequacy requirements, and the applicant’s ability to inject core capital when needed in the future.
9.       A copy of registration documents, either articles or memorandum of association for companies, or certificate of registration as NGO.
10.   Verified official notification of company’s registered place of business.
11.   Amount authorized and paid up capital.
12.   The prospective place of operation, indicating that of the head office.
13.   Certificate of time deposit equivalent of 75% of the required minimum paid up capital, that is, UGX. 3 Billion, since the minimum capital is UGX. 4 Billion. The applicant needs to deposit at least 75%, that is, with the bank of Uganda, or a licensed bank, and provide evidence of the money deposit, and will be retained until the license is approved.
14.   Sworn declaration of assets and liabilities of founder shareholders.
15.   Biographical data on each of the founding shareholders, with a breakdown of proposed ownership structure and proposed directors and officers, using a stipulated form (Schedule No. 1).
16.   In case of a wholly owned subsidiary of a commercial bank, or financial institution, a copy of board resolution approving the propose investment.
17.   In case of a foreign financial institution, a copy of approval granted by home regulator.
18.   In case of a company in operation, a copy of the latest audited balance sheet and profit and loss accounts for each of the three years preceding application.
19.   Two copies of feasibility study of the institution, showing the nature of planned business, organizational structure, planned internal monitoring procedures, and projected financials. It should also include mission statement and overall goals, market research, ownership and corporate governance, management, business strategy, and projected financial statements.
20.   Detailed notes to financial statements, including sources and uses of funds, provisions for bad debts, cash and other liquid assets to be maintained, small scale and micro credit to be made and interest receivable, interest payable, major sources of deposits, investments and earnings to be made, stating policy and categories of business and productive activities to be financed, fixed assets, including business premises, operating expenses including rent, salaries, benefits and directors remuneration, capital structure, other income, including commission fees, net operating profit or loss, financial analysis, and interest rate sensitivity analysis.
21.   Copy of applicants risk management program, tailored to its needs, and circumstances covering the following risks: credit, liquidity, interest rate, foreign exchange, operational and strategic risk.
22.   Credit manual , including but not limited to lending and provisioning, borrowers criteria, amounts, terms and collateral, and lending policies and procedures must take into account the different steps of credit process, including analysis, negotiation, approval, disbursement, monitoring an collection, taking into account sound and prudent practices including foreclosure.
23.   Human resource manual
24.   Operations manual.
25.   Liquidity and finds management policies and procedures
26.   Accounting procedures manual
27.   Audit manual
28.   A fully completed questionnaire on the institutions premises (Schedule 5)
29.   A written request to the central bank for a date and time for an interview during which its application for a license to operate an institution shall be appraised.
30.   Availability for onsite inspection of applicant’s institutions premises to determine adequacy of the institutions security system, as well as to confirm other matters.
31.   Application fee of approximately UGX. 500,000.
32.   License fee of approximately UGX. 1 million payable by successful applicants within 14 days of the notification of the decision to grant a license.
33.   Application for a license to conduct micro finance business, as per Schedule 1, directed to the Executive Director, Supervision Function, Bank of Uganda.
34.   When the application is accepted, there is a six month period for consideration and grant or refusal to grant the license.
35.   Set up a banking information management system which functional and expandable features including, but not limited to accounting, portfolio tracking, deposit monitoring, customer information system, loan application, approval and repayment information, savings account information, multiple branching, user interface, reporting system, backup and recovery, end of period processing, administration, support infrastructure and maintenance, and version control and upgrade strategy.
36.   The central bank, shall, on the third working day after appraisal of interview, instruct applicant to run public notice for three consecutive days in a daily newspaper with national circulation as per a given schedule, and provide a copy to central bank.
37.   Directors and shareholders and to be people who have not been involved in illegal financial activities, or who have non-performing loans in financial institutions, or who have been suspended from directorships in other financial institutions.
38.   There is a pre-licensing inspection which checks appropriateness of location offices is key, and covers location, security, internal control systems, presence of cash reserves, endorsement and evidence of payment of 100% of capital as stated in the requirements, presence of information management system, safes, security cameras, separation of banking hall from backrooms.
39.   Public announcement of establishment of a micro finance deposit taking institution, also to be carried in at least three national dailies, for not less than 3 days.
Once again, it is best to secure a consultant for the process, which will cost approximately USD. 10,000, and the entire process will take between 6-12 months. Apart from consultancy costs, the approximate costs of establishing a branch, with operational equipment’s, stat up capital, and working capital, is projected at USD. 1.5-2 million.

 

Ojijo Pascal


Ojijo is the Founder & Lead at GoBigHub.com, the solution to the ever present cry for youth that they lack capital for doing business. GoBigHub creates provides a monthly meeting entrepreneurs to meet and pitch to local institutional and individual investors, as well as business coaching, office space, and online crowdfunding platform. GoBigHub is leading the move away from grants, promoting trade, not aid, by offering African entrepreneurs a chance to get equity funding, with board positions, transparency, and scrutiny to make sure businesses funded are scalable, and hence, profitably sustainable.
Ojijo has also worked extensively with collective investment schemes generally (namely, investment clubs and cooperatives), as a consultant on financial literacy, legal advisory, strategic planning, and leadership dynamics.  In this area, he has also authored two leading texts on collective investment schemes, with one on Cooperatives, Successful Cooperatives - Managers' Guide to Acquire, Retain and Grow Membership, Savings and Assets and one on investment clubs, Making Money Together - Ojijo's Investments Club Manual. He sits in bank of Uganda Financial Literacy Advisory Group/ Financial Literacy Sharing Group (FLISG), and is a co-founder of Uganda Ministry of Finance sponsored committee of Champions promoting Investment clubs, Investment Clubs Association of Uganda-ICAU. He has helped in the training and or setting up of various cooperatives, including ministry of foreign affairs cooperative; finance ministry cooperative; NEMA; NARO; Gender Ministry cooperative, and Nsamizi Institute cooperative (Mpigi), to name but a few.
Ojijo is also a lawyer and guest lecturer in Financial Services Law, ICT Law, Legal Rhetoric and Law Firm Management; and a communications expert specializing in strategic planning, public speaking, and writing skills.  He has worked with various clients including ministry of finance (Uganda); Bank of Uganda; Ministry of Gender; Technoserve; AIESEC; AYDL; UMYDF; CCEDU; PEDN; Foundation for Human Rights; several universities, companies, and individuals on personal branding, financial literacy, business coaching, and entrepreneurship.
Ojijo is an author of 51 books; Inua Kijana Fellow; Performance Poet’ Armature Pianist; and entrepreneur owner of luopedia.com,  lawpronto.com,  naniwapi.com, gobighub.com, allpublicspeakers.com,  bankitgroup.com, commonsense.info, and achibela.com.

M: +256776100059. E: ojijo@allpublicspeakers.com