India Microfinance Review 2007
MIX & M-CRIL
Publication Date: 2007
Published by: Microfinance Information Exchange (MIX) & Micro-Credit Ratings International Limited (M-CRIL)
Document Type: Paper
Overview of Indian microfinance that shows an increasing awareness about social responsibility of MFIs
This report presents an overview of the performance of Indian microfinance institutions (MFIs), based on a detailed analysis of their ratings.
The report identifies the following developments in the Indian microfinance sector:
- MFIs have started leveraging their new found management expertise to achieve scale and spread of operations;
- Leading MFIs have recorded high growth rates of 80% per annum in terms of the number of borrowers, and 40% per annum in terms of portfolio growth;
- A significant part of the development has been to less developed areas of the country;
- On the negative side, MFIs have been under attack for their loan recovery processes and high interest rates;
- This has vitiated the credit culture, forcing the lowering of interest rates and increasing the necessary level of loan loss reserves and provisioning;
- The spread of MFI operations to non-traditional states has put pressure on operating efficiency, and has slowed the trend to lower unit costs;
- Banks continue their interest in microfinance, resulting in a highly leveraged industry;
- Outreach is high, and the Indian MFI industry is among the most efficient in the world;
- As they are becoming commercialized, MFIs are struggling with mission drift;
- The challenge for them is to achieve growth with equity as well as efficiency.
The report concludes by highlighting the development of a database of social indicators to assist investors achieve social/ethical goals.
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