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Social Performance in Microfinance Introduction to Social Rating.

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Presentation on theme: "Social Performance in Microfinance Introduction to Social Rating."— Presentation transcript:

1 Social Performance in Microfinance Introduction to Social Rating

2 What is rated? Social performance, ‘social returns’ Starting point is the MFI doing what it says it is? is the MFI contributing social value? - analysis of the evidence Follows the Social Performance Pathway

3 Why Social Rating?  Balances financial performance rating  Interest from MFIs, donors, investors  Systematic, focussed, relatively quick approach  Quicker, cheaper – than ‘impact assessment’: ‘improving’ rather than trying to prove

4 Social Rating Outlook: Evolution – numbers (incl assessments) 4 specialist rating agencies: M-CRIL, Microfinanza Rating, Planet Rating, MicroRate ‘pilots’

5 Social Performance: dimensions Social Rating covers 1 to 5

6 Process Results In relation to the pathway Intent & values Internal Systems Impacts Out- comes Out- puts Social Rating

7 Process Results Difference in rating products: Assessment of outputs Intent & values Internal Systems Impacts Outco mes Out puts PORTFOLIO DATA + secondary data available + FIELD INVESTIGATION MFI data &/or Rating sample Questionnaire – new clients Focus Groups 1 Outreach – who is the MFI serving? 2 Services – are they appropriate?

8 RESULT: Outreach: who is the MFI serving? Portfolio based information: Usually available: NB – check clients (not loans) Number of clients % rural % women % in different regions % group based/individual Average loan outstanding (as % per capita GNI) Sometimes available Average loan disbursed Average 1 st loan disbursed % loans < $300/$400 (or nearest local currency) Loan distribution by sector Client level information: New/recent client households % rural, semi-rural, urban, slum % /# poor - below poverty line(s) excluded: % with no formal savings/credit % socially marginal groups Other profiling: Main livelihood Women’s role in supported enterprises Daughters/sons in school (prim/sec) Quality of life indicators (housing, electricity, sanitation Indirect outreach # employed in supported enterprises – hired/non-family (full/part-time)

9 RESULT: Appropriate services? Portfolio based information: Available: Different financial services Relative access to different products/services Range of terms Non-financial services and access (as applicable) Sometimes available Drop-out rate Client level information: Client feedback on products and services – specific features: (amounts, terms, timeliness; group systems) % also using other financial service providers – other MFIs, moneylenders Specific issues and suggestions Reasons for dropout

10 Approach to scoring (M-CRIL) 1 Weighting the dimensions – according to -Significance -Relative effort involved for the MFI -Reliability of the information

11 Weighting the dimensions: example M-CRIL * Modifed according to microfinance model

12 Weighting the dimensions: example contd, M-CRIL

13 Approach to scoring (M-CRIL) 2 Scoring the indicators derived from: -Best/optimal practice (clarity, consistency, quality) -Context averages (using available information)

14 Indicator scoring: examples of ‘best practice’ Mission: clear and comprehensive (includes who, where, what for), understood across the MFI Policy for client protection: written and comprehensive (6 principles); monitored as part of internal audit Exit rate: below average (contextual) <15-20% Client awareness of financial conditions >80%

15 A Social Rating Report Example – AMK Cambodia M-CRIL 2 page summary with grades up front

16 Benefits of Social Rating For the MFI:  To provide a clear diagnostic of social performance strengths and weaknesses, an important step towards the establishment of an effective social performance management system  Same basis as social reporting standards (SPTF/MiX ‘Part 1’ & ‘Part 2), verifies/basis for MFI social reporting  To facilitate access to financial capital from social investors

17 Benefits of Social Rating For external stakeholders  To provide potential donors and investors with the tools and information for making resource allocation decisions For the industry:  To increase transparency in microfinance  To compare social performance across MFIs mirrors financial performance rating


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