Tuesday, July 19, 2011

New ways to strengthen old ways: M-PESA and informal finance

Financial Access Initiative Blog

*This post is part of a "before and after" series on a recent Gates Foundation-sponsored visit to Kenya to observe the development of mobile banking at M-PESA. In addition to our own Jonathan Morduch, Stuart Rutherford is another expert who took part in this visit – we're pleased to have him share his reactions in this guest post.

When organised financial services reach people who have for generations used informal mechanisms to manage their money, one of the most important features they bring is reliability - ensuring, for example, that loans and savings withdrawals are disbursed in full and on the promised day, or that deposits and repayments are collected and recorded accurately. It matters because informal devices and services, despite their many virtues, are not always reliable. The problem with moneylenders, most poor people will tell you, is not so much that they charge high interest rates as that you can't depend on them to give you a loan in the first place. Savings clubs of one sort or another are a boon when they work well, but they don't always work well. Storing money with a neighbour keeps it out of the greedy hands of your husband, but when you need to get it back in an emergency the neighbour may not have the cash ready at that moment. Unfortunately, this is sometimes the case with MFIs as well. Not

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