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Poor need less safety norms?
Smita Premchander
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February 06, 2007

The NABARD (Amendment) Bill, 2006 is said to be tabled in the forthcoming session of the Parliament. The bill relates to regulation of microfinance organisations (MFOs).

The rationale for the proposed amendment is that poor households do not have access to basic financial services, that the microfinance sector offers these, that the sector lacks a formal framework and that this can be  facilitated by expanding the role of NABARD.

The preamble, however, fails to outline what is lacking in microfinance regulations, what are the impediments to the sector's growth, and more importantly, how the proposed amendment to the NABARD Act will remove these. Let us examine some key proposed amendments.

To begin with, ever since its separation from the RBI half a century ago, NABARD has played a promotional rather than regulatory role. What is the basis of the belief that RBI, which has performed its regulatory task extremely well since independence, cannot regulate microfinance organisations, while NABARD can do so? NABARD has been extending loans and refinance facilities for organisations engaged in microfinance, including banks and apex financial organisations.

There is a likely conflict of interest in the two roles: the commercial one of refinancing microfinance and the regulatory role now envisaged for it.

New MFOs will be registered charitable societies or trusts, and will need only Rs 500,000 to register. The savings of poor households, the said clients of MFOs, are called 'thrift' and not 'savings'. Has a change of vocabulary been used to dilute the safety norms for the savings of these more vulnerable groups in society? 

This danger is less in the case of cooperatives which are member-owned and member-managed. But as the MFO management is not with the members, reduction of capital base of the organisation would be putting the savings to undue risk. 

Given the dangers that the proposed bill poses to depositor safety, there is a need for a wider debate on it.

The author is head of Sampark, an NGO engaged in policy advice on microfinance.


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