Linking Savings Groups to Banks What Works, What Doesn ......The study revealed that the successful...
Transcript of Linking Savings Groups to Banks What Works, What Doesn ......The study revealed that the successful...
Linking Savings Groups to Banks What Works, What Doesn’t, What’s Next
APRIL 21, 2015
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Agenda: Linking savings groups to Barclays – Insights from Banking on Change
Sybil Chidiac, Senior Technical Advisor, CARE International Amalia Johnsson, Corporate Programmes Manager, Plan UK Matt Wilson, Global Community Investment, Barclays
The experience of Fidelity Bank Ghana
Dr. William Derban, Director of Financial Inclusion & CSR, Fidelity Bank Ghana
Digital linkage – Technology solutions explored by Grameen Foundation
Veronica Sentongo, Program Lead, Mobile Financial Services, Grameen Foundation
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Banking on Change (BoC) has found that with the right help and support no-one is too poor to save, even those who are generally the most marginalised, particularly young people and women. If the 2.5 billion people who are ‘unbanked’ participate in savings-led microfinance, they represent a group of customers with the potential to save $145bn a year*, contributing to local and national economies. Extending formal banking services to the world’s poorest communities delivers additional social, business, and wider economic benefits. For this reason, between 2012 and 2015, Banking on Change aims to link 5,000 informal Savings Groups (SG) to formal financial institutions (FFIs) in Ghana, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia.
Banking on Change and linkage:
*Based on our experience that shows that with support, individual informal savers save around US$58 per year
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Overview and methodology of the Linkage Study
When?
Carried out between late October through early December 2014
Where?
Across 5 countries:
Ghana Kenya
Tanzania Uganda Zambia
How?
1. Desk review
2. In-country Focus Group Discussions (BoC SGs linked and not yet linked)
3. In-country semi-structured key informant interviews with staff from CARE, Plan, implementing partners, Barclays and other FFIs
Who?
Eight SGs/IMAs in each country were selected to participate
Selection of the SGs/IMAs based on a number of key factors:
• Proximity to a Barclays branch • Length of time for which they have been linked
• Linkage to another FFI • Whether they can access a loan
• Whether they have taken or are planning to take a loan
• Age of group members (youth groups)
Study Rationale: To better understand six key linkage challenges:
Objectives of the Linkage Study:
• distance to branches • the account opening process • demand for credit
• the role of branch staff • account access and usage • quality and design of linkage training
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The study revealed that the successful delivery of linkage required Barclays, CARE and Plan to address three interrelated sets of factors, which we summarise as: group factors, training & support factors, and bank product & process factors.
Key Findings:
Training &
Support
Product & Processes
Group
Product and Process factors relate to the account opening and Know Your Customer
(KYC) processes, and the availability of competitive and adapted products.
Group factors relate to the location, account usage, and demands of the
SGs
Training and Support factors relate to the skills training and
sensitisation process
Structuring the findings and recommendations in this way helps to reinforce the following points: • SGs are customers which, like any other, have their own characteristics and demands. • Given the nature of the Savings Groups, training and support is a central element to the success of linkage. • To be attractive to SGs, the bank products need to align with the characteristics and demands of the groups
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Key Learnings about Groups:
Groups want to link: There is clearly a high demand for linkage among savings groups, particularly among youth savings groups.
Accessibility remains a significant barrier: Data shows that the majority of BoC groups are more than 50km from the nearest Barclays branch. Underlying this issue is the fact that travelling long distances to the bank (usually with large sums of cash and on public transport) is risky, inconvenient, time consuming and expensive.
Account usage is not straightforward: Group deposits tend to be more frequent and substantial (higher value) during months 5-7 in the saving cycle; the frequency of deposits (weekly, bi-weekly, monthly) varies across groups depending on distance and the amount of money saved.
There is a high demand for credit: Although security of funds remains a key reason for linking, savings groups - especially those that have been saving for two or more years - voice an increased need for financial products such as credit; this is especially true during the first three months of the SG savings cycle when savings in the group are particularly low and the demand for loans is high.
Case Study from the Linkage Report:
In many farming communities in Chibombo, Zambia, pickup trucks leave early in the morning with
merchandise to sell at the local market, only to return at the end of the day.
When the trucks are available the group members use
them to get to town, getting to the bank in about 3 hours. Once there, they can conduct their transaction in anywhere from 5 to 30 minutes, but thereafter have to wait until the end of the day for the same trucks to
take them home. This essentially means spending the whole day to make a single deposit or withdrawal.
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Key Learnings about Training and Support:
Financial literacy and money management skills training contributes to effective linkage: Skills training helps to develop the groups after formation and builds their capacity to save. Adhering to an established sequence of training makes this process even more effective, and reduces the chance that groups will link prematurely. Groups also benefit from financial product training: The financial education and linkage training materials should be designed to cover the attributes of financial products; without this groups will not be sufficiently prepared to compare products offered by FFIs to ensure they are competitive and offered responsibly. This will also ensure groups have realistic expectations about what the bank will and will not offer (e.g. the availability of credit products). The benefit of linkage assessment tools: Linkage assessment tools help to flag potential issues related to savings capacity, group quality and potential group conflicts. When used properly, they ensure that groups only link when they are ready, reducing frustration experienced by the group and the linking FFI.
Case Study from the Linkage Report:
During the linkage process groups sometimes arrive confused about the documentation required to open an account. This can be a time-consuming challenge
for many groups, who have to return to their communities to gather additional documents or seek out BoC project staff to help them better understand
the requirements.
The additional time and effort taken to collect the appropriate documentation and return to the bank
causes frustration and further delays to the account opening process.
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Key Learnings about Products and Processes:
KYC requirements can be a major hurdle for groups: Groups, particularly those with low levels of literacy, have found it challenging to comply with the Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements such as proof of income or the need for a signature. Requirements can also vary across banks and change from time to time, causing delays or preventing account opening.
Traditional products offered to groups do not always suit their needs: Linking to savings groups may require bespoke savings products that have reduced or no fees; many groups also expect interest to offset the cost of travelling to the bank and to ensure their savings are growing.
Groups require additional time and resources from bank staff: Due to a lack of experience with banking and low levels of literacy, groups often need additional assistance from bank staff to complete the account opening process; busy staff may lack the required time and incentive to help.
Linkage needs to be owned by the business: To deliver effective and sustainable linkage, business teams must understand the market, perform regular account analysis, and support the development of tailored products and services that meet group needs (e.g. credit, mobile).
Case Study from the Linkage Report:
The Barclays Uganda branch in Iganga has two personal bankers who are responsible for attending to clients, and waiting times are often long. Because the SG accounts take much longer to open and are not part of the branch’s targets, the bankers struggle to
find time to open and process the accounts.
To respond to this challenge, Barclays Uganda has provided additional staff members whose sole
responsibility is to link groups, with targets for number of accounts opened.
For more information about Banking on Change and additional resources visit our websites at:
http://www.careinternational.org.uk/fighting-poverty/working-way-out-poverty/banking-change
http://www.barclays.com/citizenship/citizenship-in-action/banking-on-change.html
http://www.plan-uk.org/what-we-do/partnerships/private-sector/our-partners/barclays/
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Pioneering Financial Inclusion in Ghana
Linkage Banking Experiences from the Pacesetting Ghanaian Institution – Fidelity Bank Gh. Ltd.
Dr. William Derban
Director, Inclusive Banking & CSR Linking for Change Savings Charter Webinar
April 2015
THE FIDELITY BANK STORY
• Established in June 2006
• Formerly Ghana’s leading discount house • Indigenous bank owned by Ghanaian and foreign
individual and institutional investors and its executives
• Vision of becoming a top 3 bank in Ghana • Currently 4th in terms of assets, 6th in terms of
deposits out of 30 universal banks • Pioneered Agency Banking in 2013
• Commenced rural expansion early 2014 • Acquired ProCredit Ghana Savings and Loans late
2014 • Serves the broad spectrum of the market via its
Retail Banking and Wholesale Banking Groups • 2000 staff and presence in all 10 regions of Ghana
• 76 branches, 109 ATMS and 400 Agents
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Revolutionizing Rural Finance
Providing savings, credit and financial education to 1200 Village Savings and Loans Associations (VSLAs) of CARE in the Brong Ahafo, Northern, Upper East and Upper West regions.
• Grant from UNCDF under its MLE programme $200,000 • VSLA members to be given Smart Accounts 30,000 • VSLA Group Accounts to be opened 1200 • Regions – Upper East & West, Northern, BA 4 • Potential deposit to be mobilized PA US $1,000,000
Q3 2013
Q1 2014
Q2 2014
Q3 2014
Q4 2014
Care/Fidelity discussions commence in September Proposal submitted in October/ November
MOF approves project in March
Fidelity invited & attends 1st MLE workshop in Kigali in February
Fidelity/Care/ UNCDF sign PBA in March
Group account developed Group account specifications firmed up April
Partner activity inception workshop held In Tamale in May
Linkage commences
2000 active accounts By YE
The Smart VSLA Account
NOW
• Interest bearing savings account • Developed after pilot linkage , based on Smart
Savings account – need only valid national ID, can thumbprint
• Unique product code for VSLA groups to facilitate tracking and data collection
• GHS 10 to open the account, instant ATM card, both group and individual accounts under the same code
• Zero balance and no charges on the account • Dispensation sought for rural Agents who do
not meet business registration requirements • Opened by Smart Friends only
FUTURE • Separate product codes for group and
individual accounts • Opened largely by IPO CV’s
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The Linkage Process
NOW
• Quarterly schedules prepared by CARE, Implementing Partner organizations (IPOs) and Fidelity Bank
• Care and IPOs prepare groups and gather them in clusters
• Fidelity Smart Friends travel with CARE staff to locations to open accounts and set up agents
• Process takes approximately a week each time to open roughly 500 accounts with 5 Smart Friends and approximately 5 Agents
FUTURE
• Care IPOs’ CV staff trained as Smart Friends and equipped with phones to open accounts (effective March 2015 – 10 IPO CVs already trained and equipped)
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The Smart VSLA Account
CHALLENGES
• Data connectivity • Sparseness of communities • Business-‐case – leaving a $500 POS in a village of 100 • Household phones • Illiteracy/innumeracy
MITIGATING MEASURES • Mistral Mobile m-‐POS solution • Icon-‐based user interface (UI) • Encrypted SMS plus data
SUCCESSES • 3101 active VSLA accounts • GHS 48,000 in deposits • Average balance per individual grown by 100% in 1
quarter • 16 Agents
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Grameen Foundation Barclays Innovation Project
The Barclays Innovation Project
Banking on Change
� Commenced 2009
� Financial Inclusion and skills building
� Commenced 2012
� Addressing barriers to linkage/ scale through innovation
Innovation Project
Our mandate: To design and develop innovative, digitally-enabled products complementary to the existing suite to serve the VSLA segment.
Our Approach: Solutions Innovations Process
Each project is unique. We recognize this and adjust our process phases accordingly. Some projects span all phases, while others deep-dive into key phases.
Seven Opportunities Our field research comprises more than 500 interactions with potential customers and over 400 hours in the field across four regions of Uganda. As a result, the team identified the following potential opportunities to pursue.
Cycle continuity
Trusted transition
Impactful information
Grow together
Let me borrow
Group power
Say it simply
Make VSLAs a continuous component of members’ lives.
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Provide opportunities that help groups and individuals grow their savings together.
Create trust in the process of transitioning funds from the physical to the virtual.
Capitalize on the power of a group to provide better services to both the group and individuals.
Provide efficient, transparent methods of collecting and sharing information.
Create new solutions to deliver lower-cost credit to VSLA groups.
Communicate offers clearly and consistently, and make good on promises.
Two Challenges, Two Solutions
1. Paper records
Fear of Losing Records Lack of Visibility by Bank
2. Distance from the branch
Security in Community Security In and Cost of Transit
E-Keys
Challenge #1: Limitations of Paper Records
Barclays (storage)
DATA
“If I could send the bank a picture of our records they could see more information about us; we’d be somebodies, not nobodies.”
Solution #1: Ledger Link: Early Impact
Reducing Fraud
Simplifying Meetings
Increasing Savings
Challenge #2: Distance to the Bank Branch
Cost
Visibility
Security
Solution #2: Group Wallet with Bank Linkage
Digitizing the analogue 3-key approach
Leveraging the MNO distribution channel
“I would trust a phone SMS message from the bank more than a paper receipt.”
“Even when we deposit we send at least 2 people. Ideally we’d send 3 each time to have a witness.”
Solution #2: Group Wallet with Bank Linkage
Airtel Group e-Wallet
Airtel Group e-Wallet
3 x PIN
Barclays
SMS notification
Step 1: Withdrawal (Pull) from Barclays Group Account –> Airtel Group Wallet
Step 2: Withdrawal (Cash out) from Airtel Group Wallet –> Cash at Agent
3 x PIN
Agent
SMS notification
Thank you for your participation!
The Linking for Change Savings Charter Sets out international principles for effectively and responsively linking informal savings groups to formal banking products and services.
1. It’s a win-win investment that brings social and economic rewards 2. Banking the poorest is possible 3. It starts with savings 4. People come first 5. Financial education matters 6. No one can do it alone
For more information about the principles and other resources please visit the Charter website:
www.careinternational.org.uk/linking-for-change/
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