Keywords
DEPENDENTECONOMIC OUTCOMES
BANK CREDIT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS
REGIONAL DUMMIES
REGIONAL DUMMY
FINANCIAL SECTOR
REORGANIZATION
LOAN SIZES
LOAN PORTFOLIO
LENDERS
GDP
INDIVIDUAL LIABILITY
CREDIT UNION
REGULATORY STRUCTURES
POLITICAL STABILITY
LOAN PORTFOLIOS
COMMERCIAL BANK
ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
DOMESTIC CREDIT RATING
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
CREDIT BUREAUS
FINANCIAL TRANSACTIONS
MICROFINANCE SECTOR
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
MICROFINANCE REGULATION
OVERHEAD COSTS
INTEREST RATES
CREDIT UNIONS
PROPERTY RIGHTS PROTECTIONS
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
PORTFOLIO QUALITY
PORTFOLIOS
LOAN REPAYMENT
ENVIRONMENTS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
LOAN RATES
REPAYMENT
FINANCE CORPORATION
BANKING SERVICES
SUPERVISORY AUTHORITY
GDP DEFLATOR
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
RULE OF LAW
MICROFINANCE INSTITUTION
DEFAULT RATES
ORGANIZATIONAL FORM
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES
INVESTMENT FUND
FINANCIAL REGULATION
CONSUMER SURPLUS
LOAN REPAYMENT RATES
BENCHMARKING
LOAN SIZE
FINANCIAL SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
POSITIVE COEFFICIENTS
LOAN PORTFOLIO QUALITY
BENCHMARK
SUPERVISORY FRAMEWORK
MACROECONOMICS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INFLATION RATE
FORBEARANCE
CREDIT RATING AGENCIES
TRADING
DISPUTE RESOLUTION MECHANISMS
BANK POLICY
PRUDENTIAL SUPERVISION
MICROFINANCE
ACCOUNTING
BANKING SECTOR
TITLE
LIABILITY
BANKING INSTITUTIONS
SMALL LOAN
LOAN RATIOS
COMMERCIAL BANKING
ASSET VALUES
NON-PERFORMING LOAN
POSITIVE COEFFICIENT
BANKING REGULATION
FINANCIAL INSTITUTION
REGRESSION ANALYSIS
INFLATION
TRANSPARENCY
DEVELOPMENT BANK
INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INSTRUMENT
RURAL BANK
ASSETS
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
DUMMY VARIABLES
DEPOSIT
MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES
BANKING SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
MACROECONOMIC CONTEXT
CORRUPTION
LOAN
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
DISPUTE RESOLUTION
MICROCREDIT
REPAYMENT RATES
BANKING SECTORS
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE
MICROFINANCE INSTITUTIONS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
FINANCIAL SERVICES
PER CAPITA INCOME
INSOLVENCY
SUPERVISORY REGIMES
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
DOMESTIC CREDIT
PROFITABILITY
FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT
RURAL BANKS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
COMMERCIAL BANKS
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16843Abstract
This paper describes a new index of the quality of the business environment for microfinance institutions (the Global Microscope on the Microfinance Business Environment). Regressions are used to validate the index by linking it and its subcomponents to microfinance outcomes. The main findings are that the components of the index related to the supporting institutional framework are strongly linked to measures of microfinance penetration (such as microfinance borrowers as a share of total population). Components related to the framework for regulation and supervision are more strongly linked to outcomes at the microfinance institution level, including loan portfolio quality, financial self-sufficiency, average loan size, and the share of lending to women. Many, but not all, of these relationships are robust to using instrumental variables estimation in which a country's general stringency with respect to financial regulation is used as an instrument for the index and its components.Date
2014-02-03Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/16843http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16843
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Albania : Access to Finance for Enterprise SectorWorld Bank (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2012-05-21)This report was prepared in close collaboration with the Bank of Albania. This report focused on trade, services, and agriculture; however, the limited scope of their operations still leaves a potentially large unmet demand for credit in agriculture. This report focuses on problems related to the operation of Immovable Property Registry System (IPRS) and other institutions and the formalization of property rights and inscription of mortgages. This study believes the reform with most optimum impact on sustainable credit growth will be focused on (i) improving the quality, breadth, and depth of financial intermediation, (ii) growth and development of credit unions and microfinance institutions, and (iii) facilitate the development of new instruments. The authorities will also focus on implementing reforms to become compliant with Financial Action Task Force (FATF) recommendation.
-
World Bank Lending for Financial InclusionRubbani, Swizen; Kumar, Anjali; Narain, Sushma (World Bank Group, Washington, DC, 2015)The purpose of the paper is to present a
 more granular view of such projects through the in-depth
 focus on a limited number of case studies, with a view to
 understanding what factors in the design of such lending
 have helped achieve objectives of expanded access, and what
 forms of interventions may have been less successful. It
 examines the nature of Bank lending vehicles, the partnering
 borrower institutions, the country environments in which its
 loans were extended, as well as broader elements of good
 practice that make for loan success. It examines the
 beneficiaries targeted and results achieved. It aims to
 draws lessons that suggest what factors could lead to
 success or failure in Bank operations focused on financial
 access. The remainder of the paper is organized as follows:
 section two briefly describes the set of the Bank s projects
 selected for detailed review. Sections three to six contain
 the core findings of the review. Section 3 focuses on
 alternative forms of borrower institutions that have served
 as vehicles for Bank projects, particularly, public sector
 banks, apex bank structures that include the private sector,
 rural banks, nonbanks, non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
 and microfinance institutions, in terms of the degree to
 which the Bank has been able to successfully partner with
 such institutions to expand financial access. It also looks
 at alternative forms of Bank loan design, policy-based
 loans, investment loans and lines of credit, Learning and
 Innovation Loans (LILs), matching grants, technical
 assistance and combinations thereof, and reviews evidence on
 the role of loan structure (including partnerships with
 other donors/lenders) and project success. Section four
 considers the effect of the broader business environment, in
 terms of financial regulation. Section five reviews elements
 of good practice that have contributed to success in lending
 that could be applicable to loans with any objective, and
 examines their application in the present context. Section
 six tries to construct a bottom line, reviewing available
 evidence on outcomes and impact; especially in terms of the
 ultimate beneficiaries reached. Section seven, the final
 section, summarizes the main messages emerging from the
 review and concludes with observations about ways forward.
-
Financial Sector AssessmentInternational Monetary Fund; World Bank (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2015-05)Tajikistan’s economy is entering a
 downturn and the banking sector is showing substantial
 weaknesses. Although regulation has improved in line with
 recommendations of the 2007 financial sector assessment
 program (FSAP), supervision and enforcement have been
 lagging behind. The widespread solvency problems in the
 sector must be addressed head-on and the authorities should
 be jointly prepared to cope with the worst. As the current
 banking sector development strategy is ending, the main
 stakeholders in financial policy should develop a
 comprehensive strategy that addresses issues in achieving
 greater financial stability, efficiency, and inclusion in
 Tajikistan. To fully realize the potential of its financial
 infrastructure in support of financial stability,
 efficiency, and inclusion, Tajikistan needs to implement
 further reforms: the private credit reporting system draws
 on data sourced from banks and microfinance institutions but
 fails to exploit other useful data such as telecommunication
 companies, utilities and insurance companies to evaluate the
 creditworthiness of individuals with greater efficiency;
 enforcement of immovable collateral can benefit from
 improved out-of-court enforcement and credit collection
 through auction sales, which is quite ineffective; and to
 achieve greater use of non-cash payments, greater efforts
 are needed to stimulate both demand and supply of non-cash
 instruments and capture a greater share of the remittance market.