Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

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Re: Summary for our discussion on "Microfinance"

Dear Forum Members,

Thank you all for contributing to our discussion on "Microfinance"!

The summary is now available here .

Make sure to also check out and contribute to our current discussion on "City level sustainable cost recovery" here .

Thank you,
Katrin
Dr. Katrin Dauenhauer
SuSanA Thematic Discussion Series Coordinator
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  • Mauryvills
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Re: Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

Hello everyone.
In Nicaragua there are many experiences that are being developed; eg The Water and Sanitation Program of the World Bank, WaterAid, Water for People and others.
The "WSP" from World Bank launched a pilot project called "Partnership for strengthening local capacities for Sanitation in Nicaragua"; the results were not as expected; however there are many lessons learned.
One of them; how can we make the government sector identify need to utilize resources better and not necessarily through subsidies that for years have not improved levels of sanitation coverage; mainly in rural areas?
Another point; It is that access to microcredit for sanitation will not be the solution; but it is a good mechanism for people with low, intermediate and high levels of incomes to improve their sanitation and high probability of being sustainable (units would not be used as warehouses).
A very interesting document on the economic impact of poor sanitation in Nicaragua www.wsp.org/sites/wsp.org/files/publicat...iative-Nicaragua.pdf
WaterAid is developing a similar model (with some variations); but it has been developed in a more complicated context on the Atlantic Coast of Nicaragua with the presence of indigenous communities and dialects; therefore very different from urban culture.
Water for People in Nicaragua (as some of you have mentioned above) has identified some lessons learned and challenges:
Lessons:
• Support is needed to link all participants in the supply chain of sanitation (Government, suppliers of materials, labor and financial services, civil society, sanitation users).
• To train MFI´s on technical issues about sanitation in order to make easier their promotion processes.
• To support training of construction workers who can design and build different types of sanitation units. (To taste the client).
• Do not promote standard units; therefore; designs must be developed on what the customer wants.
• Poor families who cannot access credit; they must be advised by local governments to support climbing the ladder of sanitation.
• Is necessary to identify MFI’s that not only have commercial goals; but also with a social vision.
• Can be helpful to identify local organizations working with international organizations that promote improved quality of life for residents or their customers (certification agencies, FLO-CERT, OCIA, IMO- Control, USDA organic, Rainforest Alliance, etc ).
• It is not advisable suggest to MFI's conditions for these kind of loans; it is better that they consider the conditions that can make the financial product; sustainable.

Challenges:
• More ownership and participation of the government sector.
• Long-term loans (24 - 36 months) to facilitate access to poorer families.
• Funds of international organizations have to be located in smart subsidies, which do not affect the creation of a favorable environment for the development of sanitation in a sustainable manner.
• How can poor families who cannot access credit conditions improve basic sanitation?

Mauricio
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  • SophieTremolet
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Re: Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

Dear All

Thanks to everyone for their very enlightened and rich contributions. It's really good to hear from key players in the "sanitation financing at micro level" field, such as Meera Mehta, iDE, PSI, water.org, FINISH and many others.

As many point out, financing solutions cannot be considered in isolation from other interventions to boost access to sanitation- they are intrinsically linked to demand creation, supply-side support activities, etc. Many highlighted the importance of thinking through in detail how an NGO or a service provider can interact with financial service providers (be they MFIs, but also commercial banks, savings and loan associations or NGOs themselves) so as to reduce the costs of service provision (making the product more affordable) and bring in financing as "bridge capital". We heard from many who are playing this brokering role and are learning about the potential pitfalls, such as making sure that the loans are used for their intended purposes or ensuring that finance providers remain interested in what they might see as a "low-margin / high hassle" sector.

On the question of whether it is "ethical" or not to consider facilitated access to finance in the mix of solutions to boost access to sanitation, I would say it's a pragmatic solution. In current circumstances where access to finance is limited, households either build no toilets (defecate in the open or use public toilet blocks) or build very flimsy ones which don't last and don't provide hygienic protection, privacy and safety. Few countries have the means to massively subsidise sanitation and for those who have done so, it has often failed. So we need to explore ways to facilitate access to finance- and micro-credit is not the only solution but it is one that is growing and has the potential to grow further.

As Yi Wei from iDE and others points out, there is a need for gathering and sharing learning around these alternative solutions to facilitate access to finance. Foras such as these are great to start building a community of practice around these topics but they are limited in their reach. What are your suggestions to take this learning and sharing to the next level? Do we need to build a knowledge hub for interesting organisations? Do we need more research to document alternative financing models and if so, who is best placed to act as an anchor for this research? How can we take the results of this research to inform others who could better play this brokering role and incorporate this learning into the design of their sanitation interventions?

For a start, Trémolet Consulting with support from SHARE and in association with Water.org, CEPT, FINISH, MicroSave, and ECLOF will be holding a seminar at Stockholm World Water Week on sanitation microfinance: programme.worldwaterweek.org/event/5084 - We hope to keep this fascinating conversation going there and through other foras and have as many of you involved in this conversation. Do get in touch if you'd like to join this conversation by contacting This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
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  • sengel
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Re: Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

Just on the issue of debt for household financing, which I think Esther rightly noted as a major ethical issues. As Goufrane argues, yes wealthier households have used debt for housing but they've done it in the context generally relatively high waged jobs. We saw what happened in the US when 'sub-prime' lending got out of hand, all it took was an interest rate spike to precipitate a crash that then most impacted the poorest.

Given average microfinance interest rates are over 25% now, I find it well, extraordinary that this should be seriously promoted as a path for the poor to improve sanitation. Yes sanitation will eventually improve well-being (with a number of provisos on quality and universality) and this 'may' improve livelihoods over the long-term (though many other factors are more influential) but there are too many ifs and buts here to encourage those surviving through daily wage labour, other informal sector work or agricultural subsistence to take on debt at high interest rates for this or indeed most things.
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  • Katrin
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Re: Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

Dear participants,

Thank you all for sharing your experiences and raising questions on this discussion thread so far.

This is just a short notice that the official part of this discussion will end tomorrow. What this means is that contributions published by tomorrow evening will be included in the summary of this discussion, which will be published next week here .

You will of course be able to continue the conversation after this point. However, if you would like your ideas and thoughts to be included in the official summary of our discussion, please make sure to do so by tomorrow!

Thank you,
Katrin
Dr. Katrin Dauenhauer
SuSanA Thematic Discussion Series Coordinator
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  • gdrum01
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Re: Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

Hi Everyone,

Interesting discussion indeed. Here is our experience of MF for Sanitation products in Uganda:

My name is George Drummond, and I work for Sanitation Solutions Group (SSG), a sanitation business that is based in Kampala, Uganda (www.sanitationsolutionsgroup.com). One of our products is a high quality modular concrete latrine that we currently offer to urban and peri-urban households with the option to take on credit through our MFI partner - VAD MicroFinance.

Since October 2014, 8 of our latrine customers have chosen to take on loans, and according to VAD, 3 of them are currently defaulting. Many paying customers are put off by the loan fees and interest rates (20% flat), and would rather pay SSG in cash instalments since the loan requires guarantors, security collateral, and copies of land title agreements.

Although we have removed several bottlenecks, I believe the process for acquiring a sanitation loan is still quite cumbersome as it requires the coordination and appraisal by our sales (1) and technical (2) teams, and then a financial appraisal with VAD (3). On average this takes about 2 weeks and several visits to the customer's house, so I don't think the process is as quick and simple as many people may think. I would like to learn more about other organisation's process maps for customers who want to acquire sanitation loans, in particular organisations that work in rural areas, as I'd imagine the appraisal process is more expensive and time consuming considering the extra transport costs.

We have tried to market the product as an asset that:

- Is high quality, quick to construct, and competitive with mason-built latrines,
- will increase the value of the customers property,
- could save on family health bills in the future, and
- could be used to charge tenants more rent (to help pay back the loan).

It's still early days and these strategies have worked with varying degrees of success. We are currently testing new sales strategies and looking at ways to reduce the cost of the latrine.

George
Sanitation Engineer - Sanitation Solutions Group

Previously managing the SaniHub project with Water For People Uganda

Based in Kampala, Uganda

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  • Meera
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Re: Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

Just to support Goufrane's point further. Access to sanitation can have beneficial health impacts and contribute to net income as households save on health expenditures. In many urban areas, this also means savings for households on payments at community toilets.

In a public finance sense, local governments also save on O&M expenditures on community toilets. In some case, their land will be freed up too when it becomes possible to close the community toilets over time.

Finally, as we had emphasized elsewhere in our oped in Ideas for India, making cities pen defecation free requires an appropriate3 eco-system - awareness, technology options, etc. While finance is only one part of such an eco-system, it is a very important one.

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  • Goufrane
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Re: Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

Hi all

This discussion has really become interesting in the last few days, thanks all for sharing your experiences and questions.

Many (like Meera) highlighted that microfinance services were not only provided by MFIs or NGO-MFIs, but could come from other sources like locally managed revolving funds or self-help groups. This indeed indicates that there are, in theory, different options for facilitating access to finance (especially for households). However, I think it’s the MFI approach that has been the most documented or researched so far, mainly through Water.org, Water for People or the SHARE research. This means that further research is needed to identify and explore ways to facilitate access to finance for households who want to build/improve their latrines.

Others like Esther and Satya identified the limits or challenges of microfinance for sanitation taking into account a wider context. Esther’s point about the need to strengthen the supply of sanitation services, e.g. finding ways to reduce the costs of building latrines, in order to reduce the principal (and make loans attractive), is crucial. Similarly, Satya’s point about the extra effort that is needed for MFIs to market their products (which may be less attractive than income-generating loans) indicates that developing access to credit for sanitation in a manner that is attractive, affordable and financially viable requires supporting MFIs to build demand for credit or other financial products for sanitation.

All these points confirm that while access to finance is part of the solution to scale-up access to sanitation, it does not provide all the answers and developing such markets requires public interventions to support other segments of the market: building demand, improving supply, etc. Tapping on microfinance has better chances to yield results at scale from within a holistic approach to support the sanitation markets. I’d like to refer to the experience of IDE in rural Cambodia (who just came on board in this discussion) which seems to have been holistic in this way and have led to impressive results (see attached document). The FINISH approach presented here in this discussion also adopts a holistic approach – the FINISH approach is particularly interesting as it tries to identify the “adequate “ source of finance for a household, which is not always a loan from a MFI.

As pointed out by Meera, urban sanitation comes with its own challenges: there are many factors which constrain households’ ability to take on a loan for sanitation, such as the lack of space for a toilet, the landlord/tenant relationship – and again a whole range of interventions (involving different institutions) are needed to support households’ investments in sanitation (e.g. enforcing building regulation, looking at solutions for multiple households).

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I just would like to make two additional points related to Esther’s questions:
- Access to finance (via MFI) in remote rural areas: traditionally, it seems that financial institutions do not operate in remote areas. However, things are changing (at different pace in different countries) as competition is increasing among institutions and many are looking to diversify their portfolio (by offering loans for agriculture for example). At the same time, “mobile banking” is rising (at least in Africa), simplifying money transfers (including for loans repayments) and thus reducing the operation costs for MFIs (see this article I just found online regarding mobile banking in the Philippines www.jpolrisk.com/financial-inclusion-mob...and-the-philippines/). However, for severely cash constrained households in remote areas, microfinance may not be a solution
- Selling debt to households: you’re absolutely right to be worried – but doesn’t this relate to microfinance in general being a “credit card for the poor”? But shouldn’t we also acknowledge that even rich or well-off people (particularly in developing countries) get into debt to improve their homes or living standards… We also have to remember that although loans for sanitation are not “income-generating”, they can be “income-enhancing” as having adequate toilets can free up a considerable amount of time that can be used for productive activities. Having said that, as microfinance for sanitation develops, more research should be done to evaluate the impact of such loans on the poor or the less poor to better measure such an “income-enhancing” effect.
Goufrane Mansour
Consultant
Trémolet Consulting
www.tremolet.com

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  • thisisyiwei
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Re: Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

Hi all,

This is Yi Wei from iDE's Global WASH Initiative. I'd like to share a bit our thoughts that we had also shared with the Gates' BDSKM (Building Demand for Sanitation Knowledge Management group) a few months back on our current thinking on Sanitation Financing:

*Please note, a lot of iDE's experience in sanitation financing has been from our experience in Cambodia, and we acknowledge there will be regional differences. However, we also believe there are a lot of lessons applicable to many regions, especially in the constraints.



What do we truly know already about financing sanitation for the poor?

Financing significantly increases demand - at market price. With the support of Gates and in partnership with IDinsight, iDE conducted a randomized controlled trial that showed that with the addition of financing, demand for latrines in Cambodia increases four-fold, at market price. This outcome was similar across both the government-identified poor and non-poor households. There are several significant implications:

a) For even the poor households, the main constraint may be a cash flow issue, and financing can significantly increase affordability.

b) By increasing uptake during any given sales event, marketing costs per household would significantly decrease, thereby optimizing efficiency of resources.

c) The conditions under which we tested the experiment were "ideal" to control for the financing variable. Experimental conditions had iDE control sales agents in very close coordination with the MFI partner, VisionFund. These operational details still remain to be achieved in the everyday programming in a model that can be sustainable at scale.

The poor may not be as risky as we fear. Repayment rates have been 100% with sanitation and over 99% with water filters (~57,500 filters on loan, at market price, to date). This speaks well to the responsibility with which our MFI partners have assessed loans, but also begs the question of whether or not we have some room to be a bit more risky. Especially given the next point on financial viability. (*Again, note, the lending and borrowing culture in Cambodia is relatively conservative. This may not be the case, especially in parts of Africa.)
Through third party audits by PricewaterhouseCoopers, sanitation and water filter loans have proven to be at least breakeven, if not profitable for the MFI partner. Moreover, sanitation and water filter loans are very strong sources of new customer acquisition. The implication of this is that a financially sustainable seems within reach.

Where do we still have deep uncertainties and what can we do to address those?
The theory and pilots have been very promising. How do we implement the operational model at scale? Despite demonstrating a) strong potential for impact (increasing uptake across the general and poor population) and b) potential for financial viability, there have still been challenges to implement sanitation financing at scale, especially due to the operational challenges at scale. iDE and MFI partners are working on digging deeper of why this exactly is. A couple of early hypotheses:

a) While financially promising, the loans to date still have been very small, and thus does not make sense for the MFI to scale at the rate/scale that a development partner focused on WASH is interested in. For example, iDE wants to do several thousand sanitation loans a month; VisionFund set a target for 5000/year. Innovations of loan packages may help make sanitation loans more interesting for MFIs. For example, iDE will be testing bundling of WASH products and financing the latrine shelter to increase the loan size.

b) MFIs have their own strategic priorities that may not include WASH at the top. WASH is competing with other social interests. There needs to be greater alignment at the global level and national levels to set priorities. This may require more advocacy and more resources to demonstrate proof of concept globally.

c) The operational model that seems to be necessary for high impact includes elements that create tensions with the MFI. These include: very close coordination with MFI credit staff and sales agents; dedicated MFI staff time for sanitation; expedited loan processing. In many cases, this requires a lot of adjustments on the operations for the MFI partner. MFIs are generally very bureaucratic and even small changes can be very difficult. There needs to be more work done to streamline models with existing operational practices of the partners.

Despite these above challenges of working with an MFI partner, are the resources invested in figuring that model out worth the potential impact? Is it an issue of not having figured out the right model, or do we just need to build a more robust case for sanitation financing, or likely both? One thing to keep in mind is that the MFI space is getting more and more competitive, and even over the last three years, we have seen MFI partners become more interested in doing WASH financing. Is this merely an effort to appear to be more social, or can this genuinely play a meaningful role in their business model? How might we contribute to the latter?

What other models should we be exploring in the meantime? In an effort to explore ways to overcome these obstacles, iDE has been piloting an in-house financing model, where iDE receives a line of credit from KIVA and processes the loans ourselves using the very same model that was tested with MFI partners. Early results show this to be very successful. Over 4200 loans have been processed in a year in pilot territories and the gap between orders and deliveries has been closed. Can this be replicated at scale? What would be the bottlenecks - staff? credit?

And how do we ensure that what we learn is applied in our programs?

Forums like this are very helpful to keep everyone in the sector abreast of the newest developments. There needs to be more piloting and documentation of different models under different conditions. We still need to learn "what will it take" to do SanFin at scale. Is it more risk-mitigation like loan guarantees? Is it more technical assistance for longer periods of time? Is it policy-level advocacy to more appropriately categorize sanitation loans and allow for expedited loan processing?

Right now the efforts globally has been rather ad-hoc, and there needs to be efforts to come together to share and collate learnings. How might we work together to leverage resources and influence potential partners, both on the learning and implementation side?

How can we learn from financing in other sectors? iDE as an organization has prioritized financing as a global strategic priority across our WASH and agriculture programs. Although there are differences between the two sectors, we are also seeing that there are many similarities when dealing with a rural population (ex. high transaction costs, access to capital can be a challenge, etc.) What other seemingly unrelated sector can we learn from?

Would love to hear others' thoughts on this.

Best,
Yi
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  • satyachoubey
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Re: Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

Hi All,

Its really great to have these insights on sanitation financing in India.

We in PSI are implementing a market-based approach to sanitation project (3SI) that will better meet the needs of consumers and improve coordination of the sanitation supply chain to meet demand. And this requires sanitation loans into an attractive investment for MFIs (for more information: www.psi.org/publication/a-market-led-evi...-to-rural-sanitation ).

Let me highlight that major portion of Indian microfinance portfolio is managed by NBFC –MFI (for profit institution) with more than 28 million clients and 80% of total capital disbursed in microfinance sector. Most MFIs have well developed operational system to adopt sanitation financing but have following concerns:-

Financial Risk: MFI are treating sanitation as consumption loan due to no direct relation with income generation activity by the borrower. The construction of toilet requires minimum investment of Rs. 12-18K by the customer which is at par with average loan size of most of the MFIs (for income generation). MFIs are uncomfortable in lending the similar loan amount of consumption loan for its clients. Beside it, most MFIs never do any loan utilization check and mostly focus on repayment collection from its clients. The sanitation loan has huge risk of loan diverting to other purpose. Who will monitor the cost of loan utilization and how it is within the interest of MFI being for-profit a financial institution?



Operational cost for demand creation of sanitation loans: In India, the average cost of capital for MFIs is 12-13% from public/private sector banks. The banks are comfortable in lending funds to MFI to fulfill their Priority Sector Lending Norms (as per RBI guidelines). The operating costs of Indian MFIs are between 8-12% which leaves a small spread for profit margins. The sanitation loans requires an extra effort of demand creation as well loan utilization checks which need more margins to be build in to cover the cost. Due to interest rate cap of 26% by RBI for MFIs, the only way to address this is lower the cost of capital through soft capital infusion.

On lending fund for MFI: As most of the large Indian MFIs are registered under Non Banking Financial Company Act, they can’t raise public deposits or saving. The major sources of capital for these MFIs are their own capital, loan from public and Private sector banks and equity investment. All this raises the cost of capital for MFI with no or limited focus on sanitation financing. To convince a MFI for building sustainable sanitation financing portfolio, one has to enable the financial ecosystem to infuse lower cost capital exclusively for sanitation.

PSI is working on building the financial supply chain for sanitation financing for MFIs by infusing low cost capital through its fund manager. The PSI is also facilitating MFIs for building a suitable loan product with sufficient margins for demand creation and loan utilization check for the MFI clients for sanitation loans.

Regards
Satya
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  • eshaylor
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Re: Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

Hi all

I had an interesting discussion on this today with water.org who are focusing on different financial models for MFIs for water and sanitation loans. For them one of the key missing links is helping the MFIs (Or other lending organisations) to link to the technical support required to understand sanitation loans.

One issue I see here in the Philippines is if MFIs offer loans for sanitation the standard products and labour costs are too high even with a loan so the products will not have too many takers putting lending organisations off. The gap is having the low cost products available to households that make the loans more affordable especially to the poorer communities. But MFIs dont have this skill set and need guidance on the technical aspects required to manage the loans and the links to put them in contact with masons who can offer the low cost products.

I think what I am getting at is that it is not just about offering loans or credit but being sure that the supply side is also there in the price range of those who will be taking loans/credit. Otherwise there is a limit to how far the money will go and in the long term the products being offered by credit groups/organisations.

Esther
Esther Shaylor
Innovation specialist - WASH and Education
UNICEF Supply Division
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  • Mauryvills
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Re: Kicking off the discussion on microfinance for sanitation

Hello everyone;

I work at Water for People in Nicaragua. We are working with MFI´s in order to bring WASH lending to improve water and sanitation conditions in our country. This topic is too big so we have to talk about a lot and different things.
Water for People has different experiences around the world but specifically in Nicaragua we are try to develop the sector in different ways:

waterforpeopleblog.tumblr.com/post/11953...itation-for-everyone

Mauricio

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