When thinking outside the box is the only way out

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  • Boston University professor stresses need to come up with innovative ways to encourage financial inclusion of rural poor

 

“Major goal of policy makers in developing countries is to develop innovative ways to encourage financial inclusion of the rural poor. Enabling poor farmers to diversify into high value cash crops is one of the best ways to achieve this goal, but farmers lack collateral,” said Boston University Professor of Economics Dilip Mukherjee at Zahid Hussain Memorial Lecture organised by the State Bank of Pakistan.

The lecture was attended by high level government officials, federal ministers besides faculty members of various universities and bankers.

In his lecture, Prof Mukherjee expounded a new approach towards financing of smallholder agriculture in developing countries. He added that existing microfinance products play only a limited role in financing cultivation by poor farmers.

“Indeed, most microfinance include high frequency repayment, loan officials actively discourage risk taking, and group-members that share loan repayment liability exert peer pressure,” he said adding, “Interest rates charged by most microfinance institutions often exceed interest rates charged by informal lenders, which in turn are too high to allow poor farmers to profitably grow cash crops.”

In this context, he particularly emphasized the role of `Trader Agent Intermediated Lending (TRAIL)’ approach for financing the agriculture sector.

Prof Mukherjee shared that TRAIL approach yielded better results as compared to group-based lending in terms of loan take-off preferences, timely repayment, impact on production and profit of the small farmers.

In light of his experience, Prof Mukherjee suggested, “TRAIL is thus an innovative financial product with potentially large development impacts, at lower costs for the lender.” He recommended this approach as a viable (business) model of financial inclusion that can help policy makers and practitioner to expand food production and manage poverty in developing countries.

In this context, he highlighted the pilot TRAIL run by the State Bank of Pakistan and called for collaboration.

Earlier, while introducing the guest speaker, Sate Bank of Pakistan Governor Ashraf Wathra said that Prof Mukherjee was an academician par excellence having devoted his life to understanding the problems that surround developing economies.