Poverty eradication through self-employment and livelihoods development: the role of microcredit and alternatives to credit

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Poverty eradication through self-employment and livelihoods development: the role of microcredit and alternatives to credit United Nations Expert Group Meeting: Strategies for Eradicating Poverty June 2016 Nathanael Goldberg - Program Director, Social Protection

Part 1: Microcredit

J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE One theory of change for microcredit

Testing the Theory of Change RCTs of Cash Grants Cash Grants high returns to capital But heterogeneous: Men vs. Women Cash vs. In-kind 4

Evidence on classic microcredit model Angelucci et al., 2015(Mexico); Attanasio et al., 2015 (Mongolia); Augsburg et al., 2015 (Bosnia and Herzegovina); Banerjee et al., 2015(India); Crépon et al., 2015 (Morocco); Karlan et al., 2015 (The Philippines); Tarozzi et al., 2015 (Ethiopia) J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 5

What does a classic microcredit model look like? Women Only Entrepreneurs Targeted Joint Liability Collateral Interest Rate (APR) Loan as% of Income Repayment Maturation Product details 3 of 7: India, Mexico, Mongolia 6 of 7: All except India, but no strict enforcement on loan use 5 of 7: Group size ranged from 3 to 4 members in Morocco to groups of 10 to 50 in Mexico 3 of 7: Mongolia (savings), Bosnia-Herzegovina (co-signer), Ethiopia (informal) 12% to 27%, excluding 60% (Philippines) and 110% (Mexico) 6% (Mexico) to 118% (Ethiopia) Weekly, biweekly, or monthly 4 months (Mexico) to 16 months (Morocco) J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 6

Demand for microcredit was modest J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 7

Microcredit access increased business ownership in two of seven evaluations J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 8

Overall findings by country Outcome Bosnia & Herzegovina Ethiopia India Mexico Mongolia Morocco Philippines Business ownership - - - - - Business revenue - - - - - Business inventory/assets No data No data - Business investment/costs - - No data Business profit - - - - - - Household income - - - - - - - Household spending/ consumption - - - - Social well-being - - - - - J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 9

Why is the impact of microcredit so limited? Borrowers may not need microcredit People borrow to consume (not necessarily to invest) Borrowers may not be successful entrepreneurs Financial decision-making may be poor Bigger businesses may not always be better Loan terms and conditions limit their use Banerjee, 2013 J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 10

Avenue for Impact: Increase Flexibility of Credit Timing of Repayments (India) Grace Period (India) Agricultural Timing (Mali) Fingerprinting (Malawi) SMS Reminders (Uganda) Training (Uganda) 11

Policy lessons: microcredit If the main goal is poverty reduction, donors should facilitate, but not finance, standard microcredit lending Piloting and testing more innovative credit products may lead to greater impacts on poverty Microcredit may not be the best instrument to improve business profitability, but it can be an important tool for increasing people s freedom of choice in deciding their occupations and managing their finances J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 12

Alternative 1: Savings

Evaluations of savings products for the poor suggest positive welfare effects Result of being offered a savings product Increased entrepreneurial or farm investment Increased income or wealth Increased investment in health or education Increased food security, better food consumption Consumption reallocation Reduced debt Reduced vulnerability to shocks Increased female decision-making power Increased work hours Study location Kenya, Malawi Kenya, Mali Kenya, Uganda Kenya, Mali Nepal Chile Chile, Mali, Nepal Philippines Sri Lanka Ashraf et al., 2010 (Philippines); Beaman et al., 2014 (Mali); Brune et al., 2015 (Malawi); Dupas and Robinson, 2013 (Kenya); Karlan et al., 2014 (overview); Karlan and Linden, 2014 (Uganda); Kast and Pomeranz, 2014 (Chile); Prina, 2015 (Nepal); De Mel, McIntosh, & Woodruff, 2015 (Sri Lanka) J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 14

Alternatives 2 and 3: Graduation and Cash Grants

Cash Grants are Promising Cash grants can be extremely inexpensive to deliver, especially at scale. GiveDirectly: improvements in assets, consumption, food security, revenue from self-employment, and psychological well-being Challenges: 1) Cash grants to female-owned microenterprises may not be as impactful as in-kind transfers of capital 2) Cash grants to Ghanaian farmers did little to raise incomes in the absence of crop insurance.

Graduation Approach consists of six components 1. Productive Asset 2. Technical skills training 3. Regular cash or food support 4. Access to a savings 5. Frequent home visits to provide accountability, coaching, and encouragement 6. Health education or healthcare J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 17

The Graduation program caused broad and lasting economic impacts Overview from the Multi-site Experiment -0.10 0.00 0.10 0.20 0.30 0.40 0.50 0.60 0.70 0.80 0.90

7-Year Results: Consumption

Graduation was consistently effective in most contexts Program costs and returns per participant by country: Long-run benefits outweigh up-front costs in most contexts Pakistan: Program costs: $1,160 Returns: 179% Honduras: Program costs: $1,406 Returns: -198% India: Program costs: $358 Returns: 433% Peru: Program costs: $2,697 Returns: 190% Ghana: Program costs: $2,135 Returns: 133% Ethiopia: Program costs: $1,054 Returns: 260% Bangladesh: Program costs: $344 Returns: 244% J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 20

Similar model, similar effects 1. Basic skills training to create a business plan; training geared for illiterate people 2. Cash grant of $150 to implement business plan 3. Trainers provided four or five oneon-one sessions of advising and supervision 4. Group training encouraged the formation of self-help groups to share ideas Asset Training Money Coaching/ Well-being Uganda Skills training Cash grant Individual advising Beneficiary Individual advising Group support TUP Productive asset Skills training Consumption Support Savings Group support Home visit Health Blattman et al., 2016 J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 21

Streamlined interventions are cost-effective and produce positive results Women who had never run a business before were able to increase their incomes through nonfarm enterprises Supervision strengthened entrepreneurs commitment to invest Encouraging self-help groups led to labor-sharing and risk-sharing Streamlining ultra-poor programs can have a high rate of return and allow more people to benefit from the same level of aid spending Blattman et al., 2016 J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 22

Policy lessons Microcredit can be a useful financial tool, but it does not have transformative effects Encouraging the poor to save is associated with more positive welfare outcomes Across all financial products, product design and cost is key for take-up and use A multi-faceted livelihoods program can have large and lasting impacts on the lives of the ultra-poor J-PAL EVIDENCE IN FINANCE 23

Thank you ngoldberg@poverty-action.org poverty-action.org