Financing Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises : An Independent Evaluation of IFC's Experience with Financial Intermediaries in Frontier Countries
Author(s)
Independent Evaluation GroupKeywords
INVESTMENT PROJECTSADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT
NORTH AFRICA
LOAN
BANK BRANCH
IFC
FINANCIAL CAPACITY
MEDIUM ENTERPRISES
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
PROFITABILITY
INVESTMENT FUNDS
PROFITABLE BUSINESS
CONTRIBUTIONS
SAVINGS SERVICES
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL CRISES
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
LOAN RATES
BOUNDARIES
INVESTMENT RETURNS
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
LIQUIDITY MANAGEMENT
DEPOSITS
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
ADVISORY SERVICES
SAHARA
BANK EQUITY
FRONTIER
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
PUBLIC CONFIDENCE
PRIVATE CAPITAL
REGIONAL BANKS
EQUITY CAPITAL
FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITY
REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS
REAL SECTOR
INTERNATIONALIZATION
HOUSEHOLDS
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE
LOCAL FINANCIAL MARKETS
EQUITY STAKES
SHAREHOLDERS
MATURITY
OUTREACH
CAPACITY BUILDING
FOREIGN CURRENCY LOANS
PRIVATE EQUITY
AGENCY LINES
REMITTANCES
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ACQUISITION COSTS
EQUITY RETURNS
DEVELOPMENT BANKS
MICROCREDIT
CONTRIBUTION
CRISES
SUBSIDIARY
LENDING TECHNIQUES
SMALL BUSINESSES
FOREIGN CURRENCY
FINANCIAL SERVICES
SAVINGS
BANK BRANCH NETWORK
LONG-TERM FINANCE
LIQUIDITY
REPAYMENT RATE
REMITTANCE SERVICES
FUNDING SOURCES
SENIOR
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
BUSINESS SUCCESS
FUND MANAGER
SERVICES FOR LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS
DEVALUATION
MULTILATERAL DEVELOPMENT BANKS
COMMERCIAL BANK
BANKING SERVICES
FINANCIAL SECTOR
PRIVATE CAPITAL INFLOWS
DIRECT LOAN
REMITTANCE
NOW ACCOUNTS
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
SAVINGS DEPOSIT
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
BORROWER
MFI
START-UP
SAVINGS DEPOSITS
PROJECT DESIGN
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY BUILDING
CONSTRAINT
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
TRANSPARENCY
LOCAL CURRENCY
MICROENTERPRISES
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
MIDDLE EAST
DEPOSIT MOBILIZATION
ADVISORY SERVICE
DEPOSIT
BEST PRACTICE
LOW INCOME
FINANCIAL MARKETS
EXIT MECHANISM
RISK MANAGEMENT
SMALL ENTERPRISE
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARY
BILATERAL AID
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
LOAN PORTFOLIO
EXCHANGE RATE
BANKING SYSTEMS
MICROFINANCE
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES
COMMERCIAL BANKS
LOW-INCOME
EQUITY INVESTMENT
EQUITY INVESTMENTS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
CAPITAL BASE
EQUITY INVESTOR
IMF
HOLDING COMPANIES
NONPERFORMING LOAN
NEW COMPANIES
BUSINESS ACTIVITIES
BUSINESS CLIMATES
LOAN PORTFOLIOS
INSTRUMENT
CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
LIFETIME
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATION
RETURNS ON EQUITY
INTEREST RATES
PUT OPTIONS
BANKING SECTOR
EQUITY VALUES
MEDIUM ENTERPRISE
SHAREHOLDER
PORTFOLIO RISK
BANKING SYSTEM
LOWER INCOME
FINANCIAL INSTITUTION
MFIS
DISCLOSURE OF INFORMATION
HOLDING
PORTFOLIO RISK MANAGEMENT
DURABLE
FISCAL YEARS
MICROFINANCE INSTITUTIONS
REPAYMENT
ACCESS TO FINANCE
RECONSTRUCTION
DEVELOPMENT BANK
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6485Abstract
Since the mid-1990s, the International Finance Corporation (IFC) has designed a number of strategies for supporting micro, small, and medium-size enterprises (MSMEs). The IFC strategy in place since 2001 focuses on: (i) providing financial support to MSMEs through financial intermediaries; and (ii) providing non-financial, indirect, institution-building support to MSMEs through project-development facilities co-financed by donors. In addition, IFC's corporate strategies focus on supporting private sector development in frontier countries (characterized by high risk or low income), in response to their relatively lower private capital inflows and less developed banking systems, as compared with medium (or low) risk middle-income countries. The objective of this study, therefore, is to evaluate the confluence of these two institutional strategic priorities (support for MSMEs through financial intermediaries, and support to enterprises in frontier countries) as well as to provide recommendations on how the strategy to support MSMEs through financial intermediaries in frontier countries can be improved to enhance its development impacts. This study evaluated the outcomes of all 21 operationally mature, for-profit, micro enterprise-oriented financial intermediary (MFI) projects and all 72 operationally mature, for-profit, small and medium-size enterprise-oriented financial intermediary (SME-FI) projects supported by IFC in countries designated as frontier countries at the time of project approval.Date
2012-05-25Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/6485978-0-8213-7417-7
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6485
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Collections
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