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- Grameen, Oikocredit Launches Microfinance New Guidelines
Grameen, Oikocredit Launches Microfinance New Guidelines
- By Saka Khaliq
- Published March 16th, 2009
- MicroFinanceWorld
- Unrated
The Grameen
Foundation in collaboration with Oikocredit have developed a set of guidelines
to help ensure a social impact of investments in microfinance worldwide.
A statement from Grameen Foundation stated that in 2006,
over 663 million dollar had been invested into microfinance by US-based
investors, much of which came from socially motivated investors looking for a
“social return” as well as a financial return. Measuring the
size of the social return, however, has always proved more difficult than
measuring its monetary counterpart, the foundation said.
The one page document
containing the microfinance investment guidelines raises questions based on two
basic issues: (1) Are microfinance institutions reaching poor clients; (2) Are
microfinance institutions helping clients move out of poverty among other
questions.
Almost all of the questions
that constitute the guidelines point towards the need to assess the poverty
level of MFI clients. To address these questions, the document offers the
Progress out of Poverty Index (PPI) as a poverty measurement tool.
The PPI is a MFI social
performance tool developed by the Grameen Foundation, the Consultative Group to
Assist the Poor (CGAP), and the Ford Foundation. It is designed to
measure the poverty level of individuals and groups through ten poverty
indicators. The indicators vary depending on the income level and
characteristics of the country, but common indicators include, whether the
family owns a gas stove, what the house’s outer walls are made of, what kind of
toilet facility the family has, or whether the family owns a television.
A surveyor visits clients’
homes and assigns points for each indicator. The scores are then used to
derive the clients’ PPI score. MFIs can use the PPI scores to estimate
whether clients fall below the national poverty line, the USD 1 per day and/or
USD 2 per day international benchmarks.
By conducting regular surveys,
changes in the poverty levels can be tracked over time. The Grameen
Foundation claims “with 90-percent confidence, estimates of groups’ overall
poverty rates are accurate to within +/-2 percentage points.”
Oikocredit is a Netherlands-based
international non-profit financier of MFIs, with a loan portfolio of over 300
million dollar. Oikocredit adopted the PPI in 2007, and has implemented it
among investees in the
The Grameen Foundation is a
Washington DC-based non-profit organization that supports a global network
of 55 MFIs with funding, technical
assistance, training and new technology.
As of
