Mr. Wale Adeduro, a management consultant with specialization on Productivity, as well as chairman of a microfinance bank, spoke sometime ago on issues concerning microfinance banking in Nigeria. The following are the Excerpts of the interview:
Calls for scrapping of Microfinance banks
Those who are making these calls are doing so out of ignorance. One of the ways a community or an economy can grow is to empower the economically active poor. For example, a youngman, who has been doing business from his bedroom as a graphic artist, collected loan from a bank and, within one year, he has been able to employ five people. This has added value to other five families in Nigeria, and you say a bank that does this should be scrapped?
These people have wives and aged parents. What would they have done? Commit suicide? Unfortunately, we are in an environment where ignorance is put forward as wisdom in Nigeria. A lot of people don't understand what they are saying or doing. Some people that don't bank with microfinance banks sit in their offices and government houses and declare that micro finance banks have failed. How have they failed them?
In the first instance, the structure of Microfinance banks in Nigeria is not the same as in Bangladesh, where it originated from. We actually want to practise it the way it is done in Bangladesh but our environment is totally different. If your neighbour knows you owe in Bangladesh, in fact the shame and reproach associated with it will make you want to run out of the community.
But in Nigeria, a person that owes will say let us meet in court. Now, why don't they clamour for the commercial banks to be banned too? Yes, there are imperfections in the system, which prompted CBN to wield the hammer. That is also why the CBN has said if the banks are able to recapitalize, it would restore their licences. This means that it is not all of them that were corrupt or are thieves. Of course, you cannot restore the licence of a micro finance bank where the Managing Director is a thief, or where all the directors have stolen all the money.
Their offence, according to CBN, is that some of them are technically insolvent, have professional, managerial and technical challenges. Somebody who is educated shouldn't now come to the public and say, 'close down all micro finance banks', no. It is like throwing the baby away with the bath water.
In any case, all the loans that were not paid back were not taken by the directors of these banks. The reason why loans go bad is that some customers make the money before the repayment date of the loan, but because they go ahead to recycle the money, and being less careful, they run into trouble most times.
I think the commercial bank issue has come to play. There are a lot of customers who take loan and run away. So, it would be counterproductive to ban microfinance banks. Rather, the system can be overhauled, which the CBN is doing now. I am also sure CBN would improve on the framework of supervision and how to run microfinance banks.
First, there must be an enabling environment that backs up a micro finance bank, such that the law can apprehend a defaulter instantly. But today if I go to the Police with a loan defaulter, Police will expect me to pay commission. Again, if a defaulter knows someone in Abuja, he may be free. But if a legal framework exists that if you owe a microfinance bank, and fail to pay back in six months you can go to jail, the situation would be different. If a law court can jail someone because the person gave a bad loan, what happens to the people who took the bad loan?
Our legal system is so funny that you can take a customer to court and in ten years you are still in court, as a bank depending on the kind of strength the man has. So if a debtor knows that he can take me from the lower court to a higher court until ten years, why must he be worried to pay? But a special court for microfinance banks will reverse the trend. Most people deliberately do all these because they felt it is government money; a national cake.
Challenges of microfinance banking
One of the challenges that microfinance banks face is that the economy is tight. People say we should not be in buildings. I am not going to run a micro finance bank from a kiosk. We have just one car in about two years. We are not flamboyant. We don't have any branch except this Igbosere office headquarters. We have managed ourselves. Others might not do the same but what about the challenge of power? About 60 per cent of our expenses every month go into energy.
You have to buy and maintain your generator and pay for diesel. Another challenge is that we are in a system where commercial banks are not helping. Today, not only do most commercial banks refuse to accept third party cheques from micro finance banks, they also refuse to accept cheques originating from microfinance banks. For example, if I issue my cheque to you today and you take it to a commercial bank, they will not accept it. So what are they doing to us, they want us to fail. That is not the law, but that is what commercial banks are doing to us. So if you bank with Cashcow in Lagos and travel to Akure, you cannot do banking transaction. The commercial bank in Akure will want you to open account with a commercial bank.
The CBN should come up with an enabling framework that when implemented, the environment can be friendlier to the operations of micro finance banks. When a commercial bank puts fear in you by refusing to honour your cheque, they are indirectly telling you to go and close your account. So people only come to microfinance banks when they want to borrow money, but prefer to bank with commercial banks. Such people are not being fair to us. I, as a microfinance bank operator, do not subscribe to illegality, recklessness or hanky-panky in business. If it is not a Godly system close it down.
But the truth of the matter is this, the community that we operate in, is a very difficult community. Some companies that request for evidence' of performance from their clients do not recognize recommendations from microfinance banks. If I can't issue performance guarantee to my customer; he will simply go to a commercial bank.
Your competitors are after you; your customers are planning to mess you up. For instance, I am holding somebody's drivers' licence but what am holding in actual fact is a fake driver's license. Somebody gives you his international passport as evidence of identification; you take it without knowing that the man has four international passports. You can't track anybody. The National Identification system could have helped micro finance banks but it has not worked the way it should work.
Why small loans are not easily given by microfinance banks?
Yes, people say we are not giving money to small business units. Hello! Most of the small business units do not satisfy small conditions given to them. Like the man that complained at our forum, he just came and said just trust me with mouth. He had no assets.
Okay when he now did his business and got assets, we asked him to take the loan; he said we didn't give him when he wanted it. We are neither desperate nor doing loan sales. Most people don't take insurance serious. They don't even insure their Cars. Tell them to go and do comprehensive insurance, they will tell you no. Most houses do not have Certificate of Occupancy or have no registered title. Those are the complications.
Do you blame CBN for revocation of licenses of MFBs?
For me I do not blame CBN for what it has done. They probably have more facts than I have. If CBN who gave you license says he is withdrawing the licenses there must be reasons. Even before the revocation, some micro finance banks have closed down.
So if the apex bank had not intervened, of course there would have been a free for all situations. Again, there are many of them whose licenses have been returned. Others were told to recapitalize which means that many more may be restored which cases are not so bad. Yet, supervision as well as banking business is an ongoing process.
The future of microfinance banking
The future of micro finance bank is beautiful because that is the hope of Nigerian economy and that of the common man. It is the hope of anybody who is not yet a millionaire, who is not a landlord, who is not yet doing business actively and who is below 50 years in this country. If people actually bank with microfinance banks, we will do better than the commercial banks.
Not in terms of number but in terms of performance and per centage. But the active poor don't really bank with microfinance banks. They forgot that the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation insured microfinance banks the way it insured commercial banks. We are as strong as any commercial bank in Nigeria in terms of security of depositors' funds.
(culled from Daily Sun)