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MICRO SAVINGS AND MICROINSURANCE IN INDIA Presented by: Manoj K. Sharma

Micro savings and microinsurance in india

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Micro savings and microinsurance in india. Presented by: Manoj K. Sharma. Financial inclusion Scenario. Financial Inclusion in South Asia. Gross Deposits as % of GDP. Rank in terms of financial inclusion. Index of Financial Inclusion. Country. 50. 63. 69. 76. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

MICRO SAVINGS AND MICROINSURANCE IN INDIA

Presented by:

Manoj K. Sharma

Page 2: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

FINANCIAL INCLUSION SCENARIO

Page 3: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

Financial Inclusion in South Asia

CountryIndex of Financial Inclusion

Rank in terms of financial inclusion

Gross Deposits as % of GDP

50

63

69

76

• ICRIER’s index of financial inclusion (IFI) captures dimensions of financial inclusion in a single digit between 0 and 1, where 0 denotes least financial exclusion and 1 indicates complete financial inclusion in an economy on the basis of availability and usage of financial services

Page 4: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

Banking in India … Extensive but Unwilling / Unable to Cater to Poor

Deposits Held by Financing Institution (March 2009)

Banking Statistics

• In common with all countries in South Asia, in India, the commercial banks hold over 80% of the countries deposits

• India scores fairly well in terms of bank branch density – last mile problem is solved but banks don’t perceive poor as worthy customer

Page 5: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

PERCEPTION OF THE POOR: GLIMPSES FROM MARKET RESEARCH

Page 6: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

Needs of Poor in Savings

• Frequent opportunities to save small amounts locally allow poor people to save up useful lump sums

• Nearly ¾ of opportunities to save are unplanned – and typically remain in the informal sector because of ease of access issues

• Regular/structured/disciplined savings opportunities are highly valued – and used even when they are risky

Bishi/RoSCAs (often do not complete) SHGs/ASCAs (often captured by group leaders) NBFC agent-based doorstep systems (agents often

disappear with money)

So the poor want … Frequent opportunities to save Small amounts in Conveniently located outlets of Trustworthy/secure institutions

What Do the Poor Need?

Page 7: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

Why Do People Save?

Why Do People not Save?

Page 8: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

India: Why Still Save in the Informal Sector?

Despite reasonable bank branch density- usage is low because:•Too many people have either had or heard of a bad experience or have concluded that banks are simply not for the poor which includes behaviour/ attitude of bankers and poor systems•Affordability of travel and transaction time/money to use them is a hindrance•Others are put off by the “barriers to entry” provided by account opening requirements

One of 3 queues at an RRB:•Transaction registration•Transaction checking/validation•Transaction with cashierEach queue/process takes about 45 -60 minutes – total process: nearly 3 hours.

Key Findings

Page 9: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

Why Some Service Providers are Preferred?

Attributes Banks Post OfficeNBFC-RNBCs

Insurance

Security of the savings Interest paid Proximity of the services Liquidity/ability to withdraw Acceptance of small savings Deposit term Frequency of saving

Page 10: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

Preferred Attributes in Savings

Page 11: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

Understanding/ Awareness of Insurance Products

Attributes Liked in Insurance Products

Attributes Dis-Liked in Insurance

Products

Page 12: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

ISSUES AND PROSPECT: BANK ACCOUNTS

Page 13: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

Transportation: Going to the banks is an expensive affair for poor people. People use public transport like auto rickshaw, jeep or bus to reach bank. People pay between Rs.1 to Rs.50 (and sometimes even more)

Unintended expenses on refreshments: Expenses on snacks and intoxicants while going or returning from the bank.

Direct Costs Involved in Transacting at a Bank

Loss of wage labour or daily income is a cost that some respondents have to bear.

Mostly wage labourers mentioned that going to bank in itself (that takes one complete day or half) leaves them no time to search for work

Some respondents mentioned loss of important household work as a cost

Key Findings

India: Cost for the Potential Clients

Page 14: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

India: Barrier in Bank transactions and Willingness to Pay

Page 15: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

FINANCIAL INCLUSION TOOLS: AGENT BANKING AND M BANKING

Page 16: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

Channel One: Bank-MFI-Branch-Client

Tech Service Provider

Microfinance Branch

LoanOfficer

Client

Kiosk

Channel Two: Bank-BC Company-Kiosk-Client

Tech Service Provider

Agent

Telco

Bank

Channel Three: Bank-BC Company- Telco-

Agent-Client

Bank

TSPTSP

MFI BranchKiosk

Telco

Client

Loan Officers Agent

Ground Realities

In India, all efforts towards Financial Inclusion are “Bank Led”

No entity except banks is allowed to accept deposits from public. Even if some are allowed, the norms are discouraging

Very little that the other channel members, banking correspondent/agent entity or the technology provider can do on their own

One time KYC documentation is mandatory. Most households in the target segment do not have the basic documents required

Logistics is a key challenge, especially managing the agent network and cash involved

Potential solution: E-banking Business Models

Page 17: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

Making the numbers add-up• Differentiating between client sign-up and on-going

transaction … » The double break-even dilemma: it is more effective

for agents just to sign customers up• Transaction pricing

» Africa is ahead of Asia since paying for withdrawals is an accepted norm

» Simple fees/percentages/tranches – all incentivise agents in different ways!

• Long-term solution: Multiple products across the platform – will revolutionise microfinance» Savings» Remittances» Payments» Top-up» Insurance» Loans

http://microsave.net/briefing_notes/india-focus-note-32-making-business-correspondence-work-crossing-the-second-break-eve

Costing & Pricing of Agent-based Services

Page 18: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

Key Take-Aways

• Poor people have rich and complicated financial lives• Managing the basics• Coping with risks• Raising lump sums

• Poor people use a wide variety of instruments to save • Each financial tool is linked to a specific need• Mostly informal in nature • Mostly subject to the risk of loss

• To design savings (and indeed other) services for the poor, we need to understand their needs, perceptions, aspirations and current financial behaviour

• Key drivers are (usually):• Trust/security• Proximity/convenience/access• Interest rates/returns • Liquidity/illiquidity preferences

• Get the products and delivery systems right … and the demand can be overwhelming

• The poor want … • Frequent opportunities to save • Small amounts at• Conveniently located outlets of• Trustworthy/secure institutions

• E-/M-banking solutions look like a high potential option but challenges remain• Driving adoption and usage• Developing and managing agent

networks• Costing and pricing

Page 19: Micro savings and microinsurance in  india

THANK YOU