The Philippines has maintained its status as a global proponent of financial inclusion, as a worldwide survey of microfinance by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) consistently ranked the Philippines as No.1 in the world in terms of regulatory framework for microfinance until this year, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Gov. Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said.
In a speech before the 14th Citi Microentrepreneurship Awards last Dec. 6,
Tetangco said that although the EIU has amended its method in measuring financial inclusion, the Philippines continues to rank as a global leader in the field in the survey.
“In 2016, the EIU ranks
Peru and Columbia as the top two, while the Philippines and India are third in the world and first in Asia, with the most conducive environment for financial inclusion,” he said.
“The BSP, since 2000, has been nurturing a policy environment that enables the delivery of commercially sustainable microfinance in the banking sector. We liberalized regulations by reducing barriers and providing incentives while balancing them with risk management measures,” Tetangco said.
He cited BSP government figures showing that as of June 2016, 169 local banks were involved in microfinance, most of them rural banks.
Combined, they have more than 1.6 million microentrepreneur clients from 391,000 in 2002, with aggregate outstanding loans of P11.7 billion, an almost five-fold increase from levels in the early 2000s or P2.6 billion in 2002.
“At present, these microentrepreneurs have accumulated savings of P 5.2 billion. In addition, the microfinance sector has become a market for microfinance products like micro-insurance and micro-housing loans,” he said.
Tetangco said Improvements in overall access to financial services in the Philippines are also reflected in the World Bank Findex, the global database for financial inclusion.
“It showed formal-account ownership among Filipino adults increased from 26.6 percent in 2011 to 31.3 percent in 2014, with higher growth among low-income and less educated segments of our population,” he said.
Mario Lamberte, program lead of Project Compete, a United States Agency for International Development (USAid) for small and medium enterprises (SMEs), noted the growing willingness among financial institutions to expand their client base to include small businesses.
“Banks are now moving to the small-enterprise market because the large market is so crowded already,” Lamberte said, pointing to some partner banks that have said they are now looking at extending credit to more SMEs.
Lamberte also said during a separate conference on strengthening the credit-infrastructure network that the capacity of small enterprises to present proposals to banks for financing should be improved first. He said the “single-entry accounting system” of SMEs won’t be accepted by the banking community.
Tony Lythgoe, practice manager of the World Bank Group investment unit International Finance Corp. (IFC), brought up the perception in the lending sector of small businesses being “risky,” and underlined the need to overcome the “lack of appetite” of bankers toward serving small enterprises.
He suggested helping SMEs to make themselves more “bankable,” largely by understanding the way banks think and presenting themselves in a way that they become “interesting” to bankers.
“You have to make (SMEs) understand and develop business plans, keep their information in order, and educate them on what the other side wants,” he said.
Peter Sheerin, a committee chairman of the Hong Kong-based Business Information Industry Association, said another major issue is the lack of trust in banks of ordinary people, who prefer to go to their families or employers to borrow money.
He urged lenders to “develop products that borrowers can use,” particularly for the farming and SME communities, and to make sure these services relate to the “whole picture” and include related offerings like insurance. This way, the two sides can develop a “comfortable” working relationship with each other, Sheerin added.
Lamberte also cited the high transaction costs of banking as another deterrent, and urged initiatives to make them more affordable to small establishments and agro-fishery communities.
He likewise pointed to poor digital connectivity and underscored the need to improve the regulatory regime to foster the development of the information and communication technology (ICT).
“Improving our ICT systems is very important. In many parts of our country, they don’t have access to the internet. Information like what we’re discussing [here] has to be disseminated to them” and this can be done only with internet access, he said. LUIS LEONCIO
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