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RAWALPINDI, Dec 11: The Khushhali Bank needs to bridge its
liquidity gap by 2009 to remain financially sustainable to undertake its mission
through its operational outreach and the use of microfinance as a tool for
poverty reduction.
The repayment of the credit line of $68 million by the bank to the Asian
Development Bank will begin in 2009 and this will result in creation of a
liquidity gap, which urgently needs to address the liability side of its balance
sheet for its future sustainability as a viable microfinance bank.
The ADB has asked the Khushhali Bank’s 8-member-board to consider issuing on a
one-time basis a seven-year certificate of deposit to bridge its expected next
year’s liquidity gap, considering that it has thus far been unable to raise
customers’ deposits. This proposed certificate issue will need to be
underwritten by investment banks in Pakistan.
The State Bank has endorsed this recommendation, says ADB in its completion
report on the project.
The Khushhali Bank was established by the government in 2000 as a vehicle for
the country’s poverty reduction strategy and the Microfinance Sector Development
Programme (MSDP). Both were developed with the assistance of the ADB.
To obtain such underwriting, the Kushhali Bank will have to improve
significantly its corporate governance by holding meetings of its board’s
committees, which according to the State Bank have not taken place in the past
two years. The bank would also need to improve its international audit
processes.
Apart from addressing its immediate liquidity needs, the certificate of deposit
issue would help the KB by establishing a market benchmark for the bank in
assessing its own credit-worthiness, which will determine its future ability to
raise customers’ deposits and testing the market based on a future equity issue
through an initial public offering (IPO).
Based on its experience with KB, the report recommended that in future
microfinance credit lines in Pakistan, it is essential for ADB to assess
carefully the financial viability and sustainability of the microfinance
intermediary institution to be able to operate successfully and without
subsidised funding during the project’s lifetime.
In its overall assessment, the ADB rated the project as ‘partly successful’
observing that the KB’s failure to generate customers’ deposits to fund its
outreach after the loan is no longer available reduces significantly the
sustainability of KB’s microfinance interventions.
The KB, through its outreach, was reasonably successful in addressing problems
of poverty reduction and gender empowerment. However, it did not build adequate
financial resources to be able to continue to do so sustainably after its access
to subsidised funding from the loan ends.
The government’s implicit subsidy of bearing the exchange risk of the loan and
not charging KB a risk premium further exacerbated KB’s complacency about
funding its needs independently.
KB’s entire lending has been financed by the loan, the sub-borrowers’ equity,
refinancing by State Bank, and borrowings from other banks. On average, only
24.5 per cent of KB’s sub-borrowers were women, against a target of 40 per cent.
In addition, the percentage of women borrowers declined between 2001 and 2007.
The KB effected a change in its gender targeting policy in 2003, after which
time only those women, who were the actual users of loan funds, would qualify
for lending.
The realisation of the project’s expected social capital output has been mixed.
Against an appraisal estimate of $23.2 million, this component’s actual cost was
$9.35 million, reveals the report.
The KB signed a partnership agreement with an NGO service provider, the Family
Planning Association of Pakistan, in May 2002 to build social capital in
participating communities. More than 90,000 community organisations were formed,
which exceeded the project’s target. The cost of forming community groups was
lower than envisaged at appraisal due to the depreciation of the Pakistan rupee.
The business model adopted by KB was not sustainable over the long run. At
appraisal, it was envisaged that KB would generate customers’ deposits to fund
at least 20 per cent of its lending during the loan implementation period.
Despite being in operation for 8 years, the KB has been unable to generate any
customer deposits. It has instead relied on its access to subsidised funding
from the loan to finance its lending.
State Bank’s observation of KB’s poor corporate governance may impinge on KB’s
ability to raise independent funding to finance its outreach and render both the
KB and its outreach efforts unsustainable. Its performance indicates that it is
unsustainable even when judged by its operational self-sufficiency (OSS) ratio
and financial self-sufficiency (FSS) ratio, typically used to measure the
performance of microfinance institutions, when compared to those of First
Microfinance Bank, its comparator.
The report says the project had a positive impact on the development of
microfinance in Pakistan. According to an independent study, the project
demonstrated positive impacts on its participants in terms of monetary and
social indicators of welfare and employment.
The highest impact was noticed in the agricultural sector, where most outcome
variables–assets, inputs, and sales -- were higher for those, who had more
access to the programme.
In addition, the project had a positive impact by generating (family and
non-family member) employment opportunities in all sectors, which was
facilitated by the start-up of household enterprises. Microfinance borrowers
demonstrated significantly higher sales and profits than non-participants.
Socially, the poorest bottom quintile of the study’s sample, including women in
this group, benefited significantly. |