1 / 16

BANK 404 CREDIT ANALYSIS AND LENDING

BANK 404 CREDIT ANALYSIS AND LENDING. WEEK 9 MICRO AND SMALL ENTERPRISE LENDING Hatice Jenkins (1999). ARGUMENTS ABOUT MICROENTERPRISE LENDING. OLD APPROACH MICROENTERPRISES ARE NOT SIGNIFICANT FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT MICROENTERPRISE FINANCE IS NOT PROFITABLE FOR BANKS NEW APPROACH

Download Presentation

BANK 404 CREDIT ANALYSIS AND LENDING

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. BANK 404CREDIT ANALYSIS AND LENDING WEEK 9 MICRO AND SMALL ENTERPRISE LENDING Hatice Jenkins (1999)

  2. ARGUMENTS ABOUT MICROENTERPRISE LENDING OLD APPROACH • MICROENTERPRISES ARE NOT SIGNIFICANT FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT • MICROENTERPRISE FINANCE IS NOT PROFITABLE FOR BANKS NEW APPROACH • MICROENTERPRISE FINANCE IS NECESSARY TO FACILITATE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT • MICROENTERPRISE SECTOR IS A POTENTIAL MARKET FOR BANKS TO MAKE PROFITABLE LOANS

  3. RATIONALE FOR SUPPORTING THE DEVELOPMENT OF MICROENTERPRISES MICROENTERPRISES • CREATE EMPLOYMENT • INCREASE ECONOMIC OUTPUT AND EXPORTS • IMPROVE INCOME DISTRIBUTION • ESTABLISH THE FOUNDATION OF A MARKET ECONOMY • CONTRIBUTE TO ECONOMIC GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT

  4. MICROENTERPRISE ACCOUNT FOR MOST OF THE PRIVATE BUSINESSES IN BOTH DEVELOPED AND DEVELOPING COUNTRIES MICROENTERPRISES AS A % OF TOTAL COUNTRYPRIVATE BUSINESSES EGYPT 99 % KENYA 99 % ZIMBABWE 87 % POLAND 90 % SRI LANKA 89 % MALAWI 97 % CANADA 97 % USA 98 %

  5. MICROENTERPRISE CONTRIBUTE ECONOMY SIGNIFICANTLY EXAMPLE 1 : CANADA • 97 % OF ALL BUSINESSES (EXCLUDING AGRICULTURAL BUSINESSES) BELONG TO THE MSE SECTOR • 40 % OF GDP IS PRODUCED BY THE MSE SECTOR • 59 % OF EMPLOYMENT IS CREATED BY THIS SECTOR • 96 % OF EXPORTERS ARE MSEs.

  6. MICROENTERPRISE CONTRIBUTE ECONOMY SIGNIFICANTLY EXAMPLE 2: POLAND • 90 % OF ALL BUSINESSES (EXCLUDING AGRICULTURAL BUSINESSES) BELONG TO THE MSE SECTOR • 55% OF GDP IS PRODUCED BY MSE SECTOR • 60 % OF EMPLOYMENT IS CREATED BY THIS SECTOR

  7. MICROENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT IS A WORLD ECONOMY TREND • PRIVATIZATION AND ECONOMIC REFORMS INCREASED THE NUMBER OF MICROENTERPRISE AND SMALL BUSINESSES IN EASTERN EUROPE, ASIA , MIDDLE EAST, AFRICA AND LATIN AMERICA.

  8. HOW DO WE DEFINE MICROENTERPRISES AND SMALL BUSINESSES DEFINITION VARIES ACROSS COUNTRIES, BUT IN GENERAL, • MICROENTERPRISES HAVE BETWEEN 1-5 EMPLOYEES AND THEY OPERATE MORE INFORMALLY. • SMALL ENTERPRISES HAVE BETWEEN 6-10 EMPLOYEES • MEDIUM ENTERPRISES HAVE BETWEEN 11-100 EMPLOYEES AND CARRY OUT THEIR ACTIVITIES IN AN ORGANIZED AND FORMAL WAY

  9. THE COMMON CHARACTERISTICS OF SMALL AND MICRO ENTERPRISES • THEY ARE ENTERPRENEOURS WHO DO NOT POSSESS SUFFICIENT COLLATERAL TO QUALIFY FOR COMMERCIAL BANK LOANS • THEY HAVE NONE OR LIMITED CREDIT HISTORY • THEY ARE FAMILY BUSINESSES AND HAVE LESS THAN 10 EMPLOYEES

  10. WHAT IS THE SIZE OF MICRO LOANs ? • THE SIZE OF LOANS CHANGES ACROSS COUNTRIES, BUT IN GENERAL SMALL, MICRO AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISE LOANS ARE : MICROENTERPRISE LOANS: $ 100 - $ 10,000 SMALL LOANS : $ 11,000 - $ 90,000 MEDIUM LOANS: $ 91,000 - $ 250,000

  11. WHY DOES THE FINANCING OF MICROENTERPRISES DESERVE A SPECIAL TREATMENT RELATIVE TO OTHER BUSINESSES ? • MSE SECTOR HAS A LIMITED OR NO ACCESS TO BANK CREDIT AS COMPARED TO LARGE BUSINESSES • THERE IS A STRONG EXCESS DEMAND FOR BANK CREDIT FROM THE MSME SECTOR • IF STRUCTURED PROPERLY, LENDING TO THE MSE SECTOR IS A POTENTIALLY IMPORTANT SOURCE OF PROFITS FOR BANKS

  12. SOURCES OF FINANCE FOR THE INITIAL INVESTMENT OWN SAVINGS COUNTRY& RELATIVESBANKSOTHER Bangladesh 75% 1% 24% Nigeria 98% 1% 1% Sierra Leone 80% 1% 19% Tanzania 93% 1% 6% Haiti 81% 1% 18% Swaziland 71% 3% 26% Malawi 80% 1% 19% • *Other sources include money lenders, NGOs, buyers’ advances and suppliers’ credit.

  13. EVEN AFTER THE INITIAL INVESTMENT, THE MSE SECTOR HAS A LIMITED ACCESS TO COMMERCIAL BANK CREDIT • ACCORDING TO THE INTERNATIONAL STATISTICS LESS THAN 30 PERCENT OF TOTAL EXISTING MSEs HAVE ACCESS TO COMMERCIAL BANK LOANS

  14. BARRIERS TO ENTER THE MICROENTERPRISE FINANCE • MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT LENDING TO MICROENTERPRISES • THE PERCEIVED RISK ABOUT LENDING TO MICROENTERPRISES IS HIGH • MICROENTERPRISE FINANCE REQUIRES HIGHER ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS PER DOLLAR OF LENDING

  15. MISCONCEPTIONS IN MICROENTERPRISE FINANCE • IT IS IMMORAL TO MAKE PROFIT ON MICROENTERPRISES LOANS • IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO MAKE PROFIT ON MICROENTERPRISE LOANS

  16. WHAT MAKES MICROENTERPRISE LENDING UNDESIRABLE FOR BANKS • INFORMATION BASE IS INCOMPLETE AND UNCERTAIN • THIS SECTOR IS HIGHLY HETEROGENEOUS • HAVE INADEQUATE EQUITY BASE • HAVE POTENTIAL FOR IRREGULAR CASH FLOWS • INVOLVES HIGHER LENDING COSTS PER DOLLAR OF LENDING • LACK OF SUITABLE AND ADEQUATE COLLATERAL

More Related