Every crisis carries its own signature, unfolding with distinctive timing, impact and, ultimately, recovery. Floods have a short, sharp impact, and recovery begins as soon as the waters recede. Other crises, like the 2009 global financial meltdown, linger for years.
For the novel coronavirus, many epidemiologists predict a series of waves for the next year or so, with lockdowns beating back the virus only to have it flare up again when those measures are eased. As policymakers with limited information struggle to find the right balance between the health of people and the health of the economy (while also working to keep themselves in power), we can expect a juddering mix of policy-induced economic slowdowns that could go on for months – if not longer.
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We’re pleased to announce that Elisabeth Rhyne will be joining FAI as a visiting fellow. Former managing director of the Center for Financial Inclusion and a co-founder of the Smart Campaign, Elisabeth will focus on the issue of consumer protection, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath.
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by Dave Grace and Elisabeth Rhyne
During the economic slowdown in response to the novel coronavirus, the position of financial institutions is in some ways analogous to that of medical workers fighting the virus—without the health risk. Financial institutions have a duty to help their clients, even though doing so exposes them to increased risk. This is especially true for microfinance institutions, financial cooperatives and other bankers who serve lower income and vulnerable people. For these providers, taking steps to help customers like forgiving loans or offering payment holidays potentially threatens their own survival. Financial institutions are asked to support their small business and household customers through this unprecedented situation, even while their own solvency is challenged.
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Authors: Jean Lee (World Bank), Mahreen Mahmud (Oxford), Jonathan Morduch (NYU), Saravana Ravindran (UCLA), and Abu Shonchoy (Florida International U.). Click here for a PDF of this blog post.
Within one week in March, the lockdowns ordered by South Asian governments to combat the COVID-19 pandemic dramatically reversed rural-to-urban migrant flows. Our team’s early analysis shows that migration patterns may help predict the location of COVID outbreaks.
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Thanks to everyone who joined our April 10 faivLive webinar on Global Pandemic Meets Microfinance: Impact on Poor Households and What the Industry Needs to Do Now, on Friday April 10. Below you’ll find a list of resources shared by panelists and attendees during the call.
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Tim and David’s conversation focuses on the “big mystery” at the heart of the debate about training programs for micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs). On one hand, we know that keeping a small business afloat in a constrained environment is extremely difficult and complex. We’ve also found that the types of skills taught in training programs—basic budgeting, marketing, record keeping, financial and inventory management—do matter for small firm profitability and growth. These facts should in theory create scope for huge business improvements as a result of training programs. So what’s the conundrum? These improvements are generally not detected in the research: David’s meta-analysis of 15 rigorous studies found no statistically significant impact of training on profitability or sales.
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This edition of faiVLive brings together expert practitioners and researchers to discuss how we should be thinking about the impact of COVID-19 and pandemic control policies on poor households in developing countries, what policy interventions are plausible and possible, what role does microfinance have to play, and what needs to happen to enable the global microfinance industry to be useful now and six months from now.
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“This particular element is going to hit lower income people much more than higher income people,” says Jonathan Morduch, the executive director of NYU’s Financial Access Initiative. “They really have a double whammy—their incomes are being hit, and also the mechanism to help them is going to take longer.”
Source: Abby Vesoulis, Time Magazine, Published April 1, 2020.
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By Tim Ogden and Greta Bull
This blog post was originally published on CGAP.org.
COVID-19 has unequivocally arrived in the developing world. Hundreds of cases have been reported across Latin America and South Asia, and now there are at least 30 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa reporting infections. South Africa and India both announced yesterday that they would go into lockdown for three weeks, and others may soon follow. With health-care systems ill-equipped to cope with a pandemic, there are many reasons to believe that the effects of the virus in these countries will be even more damaging than in the developed world, with higher mortality rates.
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By Bill Bynum, Joyce Klein, and Tim Ogden.
This blog post was originally published on the Aspen Institute.org.
You’ve heard about how important small businesses are to the economy and the nation. You’ve heard various figures being proposed to help those small businesses: $300 Billion, $350 Billion, $500 Billion.
What you likely haven’t heard is who typically receives small business stimulus funds. Even with the vast figures being proposed those funds won’t reach the most vulnerable businesses or the most vulnerable communities. We know because we’ve seen it in the past.
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This morning we spoke with Deborah Burand, Professor of Clinical Law and Co-Director of the Grunin Center for Law and Social Entrepreneurship at the NYU Law School. She has a wealth of knowledge on how to support MFIs and investors after an economic crisis.
She shared with us summaries of two papers that look back on 2009-10 when MFIs ran into trouble following the 2008 global financial crisis.
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In a webinar on February 20, 2020, Tim Ogden, Managing Director of the Financial Access Initiative at NYU shared the latest insights on SME business training programs, with guest speaker David McKenzie, Lead Economist in the Development Research Group, Finance and Private Sector Development Unit at the World Bank. Tim and David discussed what we know about small business performance and productivity, the importance of management, and training impact evaluations--all essential for innovating SME training programs. This webinar was part of FAI’s new SME Insight Community, developed in collaboration with the Mastercard Center for Inclusive Growth.
Below are a list of the papers referenced during their conversation. You can download a PDF of this bibliography here.
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Microcredit is a cheap intervention with modest but positive effects with a great deal of scope for evidence-based innovation that could materially improve impact.
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BRAC, the world’s largest development NGO, examines the limitations of Cost Benefit Analyses and how to improve research methodologies for more informed policy and investment decisions.
In the last ten years, we have seen a push from investors, foundations, governments and concerned citizens for better impact evaluations to prove which development programs work consistently across contexts, with sustained outcomes over time.
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Thanks to the generosity of the Citi Foundation, the US Financial Diaries launched a blog and webinar series in partnership with Stanford Social Innovation Review. The series looks at the financial lives of working Americans and offer new insights for designing policies, programs, and products that can better meet their needs. Over the past month, there have been a number of exciting updates in the series...
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We were glad when Mark Zuckerberg picked Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day as one of his 23 picks for his book club, the Year of Reading...[but] Maddie Crum of the Huffington Post points out that there’s just one thing wrong with Zuckerberg’s list. Where are all the women?
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Mobile money’s early adopters in Bangladesh are much like those who first take up many emerging technologies worldwide - literate urban males who are above the poverty line. Mobile money’s promise, however, lies in its potential to deliver financial services cheaply and easily to groups who traditionally have less access to formal financial tools including women and the poor.
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