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Philippines Country-Level Savings AssessmentRead the results of CGAP's second country-level test diagnostic of small-balance
Executive SummaryThis report summarizes the results of the second test of CGAP’s Country Savings Assessment Toolkit, which took place in the Philippines. The purpose of the toolkit is to help government agencies, donors, and others identify opportunities and constraints in increasing poor people’s access to high-quality deposit services in various countries. The methodology examines four levels of the financial system: clients, financial institutions (micro), supporting infrastructure (meso), and policy (macro). It concludes with suggestions for possible strategies to improve the quality and quantity of deposit services available to poor and low-income households.
At the micro level, a variety of institutional types serve different market niches. However, deposit products appear to be unaffordable and physically inaccessible to the poorest clients, and those institutions closest to the poor also demonstrate the weakest performance. At the meso level, plentiful donor-funded credit lines, excess liquidity in the banking system, and a lack of investment opportunities, all reduce the incentives for stronger institutions to collect small deposits. An underdeveloped financial infrastructure, such as payment and liquidity management systems, pose further obstacles for some financial institutions. However, new mobile phone banking applications offer a cost-effective, accessible way for institutions to process low-value payments. At the macro level, although the government’s commitment to market-led microfinance and the overall regulatory structure facilitates serving low-income clients, certain overly conservative operational restrictions may limit the outreach of regulated institutions. In the meantime, cooperatives suffer from an almost total lack of oversight. In light of these findings, the following nine areas could provide promising avenues for intervention to improve the mobilization of small-balance deposits in the Philippines.
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