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> Posted by Christy Stickney, Habitat for Humanity

Can we possibly address financial inclusion without discussing housing microfinance?

Financing for housing is in great demand, frequently cited as clients’ top choice after a business loan, and is the most commonly identified utilization of business financing outside of financing businesses. MFIs consistently report that housing portfolios perform as well as or better than other loan products, and believe that it balances portfolio risk and increases profitability (even though concrete data is often lacking).

Housing microfinance typically refers to non-mortgage housing loans utilized primarily for home improvements, repairs, and incremental building. Loan terms are generally under three years, and interest rates tend to be within the market range for microfinance loans. For the majority of the world’s poor, who build homes incrementally as financing becomes available, housing microfinance is uniquely tailored to match their building and financing patterns. Moreover, improved housing contributes to social benefits of improved health, education, economic stability and security. So why is it that housing microfinance isn’t growing faster, given the compelling advantages to both financial institutions and the clients they serve? Read the rest of this entry »

> Posted by Kelley Mesa

Let your New Year’s resolution for 2010 be to subscribe to the Center’s podcast series!

The Center has a growing library of podcasts on topics ranging from microfinance and energy to client protection and housing innovations. The latest include some exciting, and quite musical, pieces by Paul Rippey…

  • Asif Dowla, Climate Change and Microfinance
    Asif Dowla talks with host Paul Rippey about the new paper, sponsored by Grameen Foundation and Oxfam USA, on Climate Change and Microfinance. Professor Dowla discusses how MFIs can “climate proof” their financial products, and of the importance of remittances and savings in a changing climate.
  • Jacob Moss and the Partnership for Clean Indoor Air
    In this 13th episode, Paul Rippey interviews Jacob Moss of the EPA, who has led the effort to create the Partnership for Clean Indoor Air. Jacob and Paul talk about stoves, including some breakthrough models that might change everything!

Learn and listen more here >

And stay tuned for a new Energy Links podcast coming your way very soon…

> Posted by Elisabeth Rhyne

Client and Loan OfficerI’m blogging today from the annual meeting of the ACCION Network taking place in Buenos Aires, hosted by Columbia Microcredito of Banco Columbia.  We spent a very interesting morning talking about the effect of the financial crisis on microfinance institutions and their clients in Latin America.  We’ve heard from Michel Burbano of Banco Solidario in Ecuador, Carlos Viteri of Financiera Apoyo Integral in El Salvador and Kurt Koenigsgfest of BancoSol in Bolivia.  Some of the points that really hit me this morning are:

  • The severity of the crisis differs by country.  It is hitting El Salvador much harder than Bolivia because El Salvador is more integrated into the US economy.  What for MFIs in Bolivia is so far a somewhat challenging time is for MFIs in El Salvador a very serious situation.
  • The crisis is still unfolding, but these MFIs have had time to think about how to respond and are already implementing their responses. Their most important message is: stick to your knitting.  Do what you do best.  The biggest concern is the rise of delinquency as clients’ businesses suffer.  The MFIs are responding in many ways.  The most important is focusing on their credit methodology, especially assessing client  ability and willingness to repay. 
  • Some adjustments are necessary, including changing staff incentives.  When general delinquency rises Read the rest of this entry »

> Posted by Kelley Mesa

Check out the latest Center podcast on housing microfinance. The second in the series on business solutions to housing microfinance, in this podcast David Levai speaks with Willie Vos, managing director of SouthNet Cygnus. A branch of the South African property developer SouthNet, SouthNet Cygnus is a residential-property developer focusing on the lower-income groups of South Africa. They have taken a unique approach to solving the housing problems at the bottom of the pyramid, integrating differing components of the housing value chain by bringing together not only developers and financiers, but municipal stakeholders and services.

> Posted by David Levai

housingToday, more than half of the world’s population lives in cities, and this trend is not about to change. Among those urban dwellers in the developing world, more than a third lives in a slum or extremely precarious conditions. But numerous socially minded individuals are uncovering new ways to provide decent quality homes at affordable costs to low-income populations – helping small property owners become landlords, providing standardized housing units in recycled shipping containers, lending building material for self-improvements, etc.

In late 2008, fourteen participants invited by the Center for Financial Inclusion and ACCION Global Investments gathered in Washington, DC, with two goals in mind – to dissect the bottlenecks in the provision of affordable housing to the bottom of the pyramid in emerging markets and to identify innovative private-sector-driven solutions.

Representing India, South Africa, Kenya, Mexico, Bolivia, and the United States, these practitioners confronted their analyses of the hurdles in reaching scale and quality in housing finance for the poor as well as their vision going forward. The profiles of the attendees were varied Read the rest of this entry »

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The views and opinions expressed on this blog, except where otherwise noted, are those of the authors and guest bloggers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Center for Financial Inclusion or its affiliates.
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