Kristina Keneally: India diary days 4 and 5

Kristina_with_more_clients
India assaults the senses; Mumbai's slums overwhelm them.
 
Slums can be ranked by their liveability, or I suppose, by their awfulness. Annapurna, Opportunity International Australia's microfinance partner in Mumbai, ranks the slums they serve in five categories: one being the worst living situations and five being the best.  
On day five, Annapurna took us to a category two slum. 
 
Conveying the rank of a category two Mumbai slum in words is beyond my capability as a correspondent. This slum sits atop and alongside a rubbish tip. The people here are almost all rag pickers: they pick through the rubbish for what is salvageable and sell it. The reality of living on a rubbish tip is that it stinks and there are dense clouds of flies everywhere. It’s grimy and dirty and cluttered. The slum we visited in Delhi seemed downright homey and liveable compared to this.
 
With Annapurna’s director, Mehdda, and Opportunity’s Indian director, Ranjani, I met a group of women who were on their second microfinance loans. We gathered in about the only space where 17 people could, a small paved area sandwiched in between a row of dwellings and the tip. Bags of rubbish surrounded us (there is nowhere else for the women to store their inventory). A plastic covering lay on the ground, and the women sat on it. They insisted that Mehdda and I sit on two chairs, no doubt some of the very few pieces of furniture in this place. 
 
As we sat there amongst the flies and the stench, we were physically quite close but I felt we were worlds apart. The women I met in Delhi – whilst extremely poor – were clearly far better off than these women. The women in Delhi lived in a cleaner and healthier environment, had better food and clothes and were far more confident. These women just seemed to me, at first blush, to be in absolute desperate circumstances, and here I was to talk with them about their lives.
 
In my job, I’ve had to speak to people in nearly every imaginable circumstance: welcome the likes of Prince William, Bono and the Pope; meet with elderly public housing tenants with no English; speak with local residents angry about new roads or housing developments, or people living with disabilities or terminal diseases. I’ve held forth on national television, in question time, and in my fair share of tough press conferences. But here, in a Mumbai slum, I have never felt more ill at ease or nervous to speak before a crowd of people. Communicating relies on building upon a common or shared understanding. What could I possibly understand about the lives these women were living?
 
Fortunately, Mehdda and Ranjani were there to help, though Mehdda started in Hindi by introducing me as a ‘former chief minister’ in Australia. When they all swung their eyes towards me, Ranjani translated the introduction and said ”They are duly impressed.” Great, I thought, that’s just added another stretch of distance between my life and theirs. But Mehdda then asked the women to tell me about their children. How many do you have? Boys or girls? Ages? Are they in school? What do you hope for them? 
 
As each woman spoke about her family, our common humanity was evident. A theology professor of  mine once said that human beings are creatures of hope – otherwise why would we, as a species, continue to give birth to children we know will one day die? The women I met in that Mumbai slum were the greatest evidence of that statement. They wanted nothing more than a better future for their children, and they would pour what meagre resources they had into that aim. With the loans they were able to get through Opportunity’s partner Annapurna, they were literally building that opportunity: building roofs of tile or tin, rather than tarps, putting fly screens in their dwellings, even putting down this small area of paving upon which we sat. One woman said to me ”We don't want our children to be rag pickers; we want them to work in offices.”

Another said: “My children are going to school, and I want them to be able to move out of here.” Then another asked me if I had children. I told them I had two boys, aged 13 and 11, and they smiled and nodded approvingly, more duly impressed by my role as a mother than as a former chief minister. We’d found our shared understanding. We loved our children. We wanted the best for them. 
 
I asked them what their husbands thought about the loans. They all smiled or laughed. Some said their husbands were really happy – it meant that there was still money, even if the husband couldn’t work. In a country where girls are not always educated and where women sometimes only eat if there is food left over after the men finish, these sentiments are pretty significant.
 
One woman said to me ”We want the loans – not grants. The loans we pay back. It makes us feel good that we pay it back. We want to make it on our own, not with money just given to us.” I've been a feminist pretty much my whole life, but I’ve never heard such a strong assertion of female empowerment.
 
I asked them what difference the life and health insurance that comes with every loan from Annapurna makes to their lives. Two women, both looking too young to be widows, told me that their husbands had died. The life insurance pay-out was the difference between their children staying in school or dropping out to become rag pickers. 
 
We stayed for about an hour. After photos and hugs and clasped hands, we left. I will admit, I was sad to leave them there, but also relieved to escape the flies and the stench. Even some of our more experienced and local Opportunity staff found this slum hard going. Yet Annapurna works there regularly; delivering microfinance and basic health education. All of Annapurna staff are female, and mostly young, recent social work graduates or women from the local community trained up to be client service officers.
 
We then followed the Annapurna women to a category four slum, a place not on a rubbish tip, and where most dwellings are constructed with bricks and the most basic of necessities, including electricity. We crammed into an upstairs one-room dwelling, 20 of us, including a few children. This was a client meeting, where the monthly repayment was made and recorded by each client. Microfinance organisations like Annapurna have needed to create their own infrastructure and systems: application forms, repayment records, receipt books, insurance cards, etc. It’s an entire paper-based system that is eventually fed back to the head office and entered into a computer system. It’s a rigorous banking system invented and maintained in an otherwise chaotic world.  
 
That was day five. The preceding day was one of high level meetings with Chief Executive Officers of major corporations and banks, trying to convince them (with some success) of the benefits of microfinance and the need for corporate social responsibility in India. It’s an emerging idea in India, with companies like Axis Bank setting up a Foundation that receives one percent of the bank’s profits. Their goal is to ‘create one million livelihoods in 5 years’.
 
Days four and five were an example of the two India’s that exist: one, the fourth biggest economy in the world posting strong growth, and the other, where one-third of the world's poor live.

Kristina Keneally, MP
Opportunity International Australia Ambassador

www.opportunity.org.au
@OpportunityAUS

 

From the field: Calum Scott

Day one: Opportunity International Australia's Research Project Manager, Calum Scott, is in Pune (central India) visiting one of Opportunity's microfinance partners, Annapurna.

 

CEO diary note: A downpour and a trickle

Ranjani, Monty and I caught the morning flight from Chennai into the Bombay monsoon. Traffic in gridlock. Half of this city seems to be slums with blue tarps on roofs and the rest seems to be consumed by vines. Urban Jumanji.

Over a veg curry, we swap stories and plans with Emily Harrison, an Aussie who heads Innovaid. It's a foundation that manages other charities like Brett Lee's Mewsic. Brett wants to see kids living in slums and rural villages get the chance to learn and enjoy music. Music to heal, educate and empower. Brett loves India (he has learnt Hindi), loves music and has even had a hit duet with diva Asha Bhosle, which went to number two on the Indian charts. So why would we be interested in Mewsic? Because it's working where we work and we want to know about, encourage and even strengthen others who help the same people we do. Good development involves openness and alliances, not the isolation so often seen.

Two weeks ago, terrorists struck Mumbai not far from where we were meeting. There were 26 people killed and 130 wounded. The people here are not so much shocked as they are angry. This has been just another hit in a string of major attacks, including the 2006 metro attack and the 2008 hotel attacks. Now everyone's going about their business and so were we. Next was a meeting with Mr Joseph, the CEO of the Axis Bank Foundation.

Axis Bank, one of India's big private sector banks, transfers up to 1% of net profit to its foundation each year. That's up to A$7 million per annum. In addition, Babu Joseph is ramping up a workplace giving program from the bank's 27,000 employees. Axis has a publicly stated goal of creating one million sustainable livelihoods in the next five years. Sustainable livelihoods are exactly what we aim for, too. Opportunity does this through the provision of small loans and business training. Mr Joseph has the passion, the funding and some excellent projects in the pipeline. He's also very keen to work with us to make his goals – and ours –,a reality. The bank has been an important funder of our microfinance partners since the start of the India program. In this period of restricted bank funding for microfinance, relationships like this are key. We leave Mr Joseph full of hope.

There are signs the banks are moving. Today it’s reported that Union Bank has sanctioned a Rs100 crore (A$21m) loan to Bandhan, a large Kolkata-based MFI. The Economic Times of India carried the story on its front page: ‘Bank Loans for MFIs Start Trickling in’.

Let it pour!

Robert Dunn
CEO
Opportunity International Australia

 

CEO diary note: Money makes the world go round?

I’m back in monsoonal Madras, otherwise known as Chennai. It’s wonderful to be back in India – wonderful, exciting, chaotic India.

 

This trip is all about getting more funds to socially focused microfinance institutions (MFIs). Many poor people are being sidelined while the local and international banks in India are not lending at the rate these MFIs need. People are on the journey out of poverty but they are being parked by lack of funds.

 

Over the next week I’ll be meeting with people who want to address that very issue – some foreigners, mainly locals. People who can influence local bank leaders and the government. People who are looking to catalyse local and foreign funds to work alongside money provided by Opportunity donors. And I’ll be meeting with two of our key MFI partners: GO Finance in Chennai and Annapurna Mahila Mandal in Mumbai.

 

Today’s press here is suggesting that BASIX, one of the large MFIs based in Hyderabad, is about to default on its loans. The state of Andhra Pradesh (of which Hyderabad is the capital) has particular challenges not being experienced elsewhere in India. Still, as I was driving in from the airport, Ranjani (our leader in India), sent me this text: "Welcome back to India and the MF sector here in the most historical phase of its existence!"

 

It is a key time but I’m optimistic. The signs are not all negative. The central government and the Reserve Bank of India have come out strongly in favour of microfinance that focuses on the needs of the borrower. During the last month, the capital markets have again provided funds to the sector.

 

Opportunity is working with 18 MFI partners in India which serve over 1.5 million families. Our investment is in their lives.

 

So come with me on this journey as we make a difference. Follow my blogs here and on Twitter at www.twitter.com/roberddunn

 

Robert Dunn
CEO
Opportunity International Australia 

 

 

 

Reserve Bank of India still supports microfinance in India

Microfinance in India has grown to serve millions of households in recent years, though this growth is still dwarfed by the immense need for financial services. However in recent months, microfinance has come under significant scrutiny in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, with concerns raised over the treatment of borrowers and the levels of interest rates being charged. Many commentators have accused commercial microfinance institutions – those organisations whose primary motive is making a profit on microfinance – of behaving irresponsibly, pursuing growth and commercial returns as they allow clients to build up excessive levels of debt. The controversy is also suggested to be, in no small part, a backlash toward the recent initial public offering by SKS Microfinance, India’s largest for-profit microlender, headquartered in the state capital.

The situation in Andhra Pradesh had an effect on the microfinance industry as a whole, including Opportunity’s socially focused partners who aim to help people out of poverty, not make a profit.

Andhra Pradesh – the centre of the concern
Late last year, local politicians instructed microfinance borrowers in Andhra Pradesh to stop making loan repayments until the microfinance institutions met certain regulatory requirements. This put at risk the sustainability of all microfinance institutions in the area – with social microfinance providers being affected as well as commercial. About 15% of Opportunity’s India Program portfolio operates in Andhra Pradesh, and Portfolio At Risk (PAR) for these partners has been affected in recent months.

Elsewhere in India – the need for bank lending
Outside Andhra Pradesh, client repayment rates have not been impacted. What is of concern however is the hesitancy of banks to lend to microfinance institutions in all states, not just Andhra Pradesh. This reduced funding affects a microfinance institution’s ability to expand its reach to people in need – those still waiting for much-needed financial services to help them start small businesses, earn incomes and provide for their families.

The need for microfinance in India remains massive – and Opportunity’s partners have a strong track record of serving poor communities with our social mission. Our partners remain capable of meeting the needs of the poor in India now and in the future, and the current lack of bank funding for microfinance is of concern. Consequently, Opportunity’s ongoing support of our microfinance partners is now more important than ever. It is vital that our partners have the resources they need to increase their effectiveness in the fight against poverty.

In India, Opportunity’s local subsidiary Dia Vikas Capital is playing an important advocacy role in the sector. Opportunity and Dia Vikas are constantly monitoring the situation in India and advocating on behalf of our microfinance partners to the Indian government and local banks. Recently Robert Dunn, CEO of Opportunity, and KC Ranjani, Managing Director of Dia Vikas, had a very positive meeting with the Deputy Governor of Reserve Bank of India to discuss the current situation. Positively, he reiterated that the Reserve Bank of India remains supportive of financial inclusion for the people of India, and the important role microfinance can play in bringing this about.

The Reserve Bank has in fact asked banks to keep funding the microfinance sector, but in a somewhat unstable environment, some banks are not rushing to do so. This could lead to a reduction in loan portfolio (and therefore the number of clients served) and could also reduce our partner’s ability to leverage donor funds (done to increase impact). Dia Vikas is continuing to help our partners obtain funding from local banks and is actively engaging with relevant stakeholders to advocate on behalf of our partners and their clients – reiterating our social mission and concern over microfinance practices that do not serve the best interests of the poor.

The Malegam Report and the future of the sector in India
With the situation in Andhra Pradesh raising broader questions about codes of conduct, transparency, profitability and the effectiveness of microloans, the Reserve Bank appointed the Malegam Committee to review the current climate and offer recommendations.

Its report was released in late January, with the aim to restrict the detrimental behaviours of some of the commercial MFIs operating in India and to offer some regulation for the sector. The review is welcomed by Opportunity International Australia, in as such as it provides an opportunity to refocus the microfinance industry on the needs of poor communities – those whom it was established to serve.

Significantly, the report confirms the Reserve Bank’s support for the microfinance sector as an important means of providing access to financial services to people living in poverty. We are encouraged that many of the recommendations of the Malegam Report are already in effect and actively practised by our socially-focused partners. Key aspects of the report include:
• The introduction of codes of conduct, outlining that no coercive methods are to be applied for recovery of loans, specifications about locations where recoveries can take place, the establishment of grievance processes and client protection charters (Client-focused principles, including the implementation of client protection charters, have been a key component of Opportunity’s India program since its inception. Already in 2011 we have held a workshop with our partners on how to strengthen their client protection charters).
• An emphasis on the transparency of interest rates and how they are calculated, including a recommendation for interest rates to be capped at 24% (Our partners explain the terms and conditions of loan products to new and returning clients, often within the context of a wider financial literacy program).
• Increased lending by banks to MFIs is encouraged and priority sector lending stays in place (priority sector lending is the requirement by the government for banks to lend a percentage of their funds to sectors the government wants to support, including the social sector – this is encouraging as the funding needs of MFIs remain as urgent as ever).
• Increased emphasis on skills development and training of microfinance clients (Opportunity’s partners provide a range of business and financial literacy training to their clients. In many cases, our partners have employed innovative and intensive approaches to building the skills of marginalised women. For an example, see here:  http://www.opportunity.org.au/Resources/DVDs/Rope-Weavers-DVD.aspx)

Opportunity is confident of the crucial role that social microfinance plays in enabling poor people to transform their lives. We welcome and encourage developments in the sector that refocus attention on the needs of poor communities. Together with our supporters in Australia, we need to continue to support the excellent work of our microfinance partners in India. Your support is highly valuable, effective and needed now more than ever.

P1050427

 

World economic growth must include the poor

The 41st World Economic Forum Annual Meeting held in Davos, Switzerland recently highlighted various important issues surrounding global economic growth. During the five-day forum, the issue of poverty was high on the agenda with several leaders emphasising the need to assist the world’s poor through economic growth.

Chanda Kochhar, Chief Executive Officer of ICICI Bank, the largest private bank in India, said that growth will only be sustainable if it is inclusive of the world’s poor and jobless.

"It is just imperative for all of us as companies and as countries to focus on saying that 'I'm making our growth more inclusive'," Ms Kochhar said.

"Gone are the days (when) it's just enough to say that some people will earn theirs, and then they will distribute," she said at a closing panel on the Global Agenda in 2011. "I think the model has to shift to the grass roots to say, 'can we create enough basic stability plus employment generation opportunities for each and every of the small individuals ... to participate in growth.'"

In an effort to battle the issue of poverty, 17 companies have partnered with the World Economic Forum to support poor farmers and their families. The initiative involves making farming an economically sustainable business, and enabling their children to receive an education.

At Opportunity International Australia, we provide a sustainable solution to poverty, using small loans to enable people to start their own business, earn an income and participate in their local economy. By doing so, clients are able to feed their families, educate their children and save for the future. If you would like to help by providing a small loan, please click here.

 

Hunger pangs

Asian food prices hit a record high last month, as prices for some staple commodities reached their highest levels in 20 years. Recent climate instability and resulting crop damage has been blamed for the growing food inflation crisis. The United Nations Food and Agricultural Organisation warn that this trend is likely to continue over the next year.

The recent inflation has sparked concerns that the trend will spread to other sectors of the economy. In countries where millions still live below the poverty line, a rise in prices can be devastating. For many, food constitutes a sizeable proportion of their expenses and the recent spike in prices comes as a major blow to already limited budgets.

"Food price increases impact the poor hardest as food is a higher proportion of their incomes," said James Bond, Chief Operating Officer of the World Bank's political risk insurance arm. "It creates significant tension in poorer countries, exacerbates standard of living disparities and is a major source of unrest." A similar crisis in 2008 prompted riots and protests in many parts of the word, and there are fears that this could happen again.

Global food insecurity and rising costs of living have eroded the incomes of many people living in need. At Opportunity International Australia, our aim is to provide more than just aid. Through small loans, our clients are able to set up and grow businesses, generating new income for themselves and their families so they can endure rising food prices. If you would like to provide a small loan today, please click here.

 

Flooding disasters affect Australia and the Philippines

The devastating floods in Queensland have affected over 200,000 people and inundated nearly 1,200 homes, covering close to a million square kilometres of land. One of the most widespread disasters to affect Australia, financial losses are estimated to exceed $8 billion.

While Australia moves into the recovery and rehabilitation after the flooding, reports have revealed that in the Philippines, 17 people have died and thousands have been displaced by landslides and flooding in the eastern part of the country. The flooding, said to be the worst in 10 years, is likely to have long-term repercussions as displaced Filipinos return to towns destroyed by the rain. The impact of the trauma to victims is impossible to measure, but costs to infrastructure and agriculture are likely to be immense. Governments and aid organisations are working to minimise losses and help provide relief to those affected.

2010 saw a wave of natural disasters around the world, claiming a total of 295,000 lives and costing $130 billion. With homes and livelihoods destroyed, the most recent victims of the Philippine flood will need more than immediate disaster relief. As they return to villages devastated by flooding, microfinance can be a powerful tool in rebuilding their lives. Small loans can set up small businesses and, as these grow, families are able to support themselves and plan for the future. By empowering people to develop a source of income, microfinance offers a sustainable solution to poverty.

Opportunity International Australia partners with three microfinance institutions in the Philippines, working to improve the lives of hundreds of thousands of families. If you would like to help provide a loan to a person living in poverty, please click here.

Phil5_kopie

 

Human Rights Day 2010

Friday 10 December marks the 62nd anniversary of the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Day, recognising the work done to maintain human rights around the world. By campaigning for justice, investigating human rights violations and supporting people in need, human rights defenders help us realise a fairer and more equitable world.

Drafted in 1948, the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights defines the basic rights and freedoms that every person should be entitled to. The 25th article of the declaration states that all human beings have a right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of themselves and of their families, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond their control. With 1.4 billion people still living on less than US $1.25 a day, it is clear that there is still much work to be done to meet these human rights goals for every person across the globe.

At Opportunity International Australia, we provide a sustainable solution to poverty. We help people work their way toward a better future for themselves and their families through microfinance. In the developing world, a small loan can start a business or grow an existing one. With the additional income these loans generate, clients are able to feed their families, educate their children and save for the future. If you would like to help by providing a small loan, please click here.

Source: World Bank