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A
national perspective on microfinance in Zimbabwe
Chamunorwa Rusakaniko, Zimbabwe Association of Microfinance
Institutions (ZAMFI)
Extracted from Microfinance Monitor Issue No. 6
December 31, 2007
A national perspective
on microfinance in Zimbabwe has been facing a number of economic
and social challenges ince 2000. These challenges include hyperinflation,
shortages of foreign currency, high levels of unemployment, high
incidence of poverty and general decline in real incomes and standards
of living, as well as a shrinking industrial base.
The apparent presence
of these insurmountable challenges cast doubt on the attainability
of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) such as reducing poverty
and hunger, reducing the impact of HIV/AIDS as well as reducing
gender inequalities. The later are even more glaring given the circumstance
that increasingly there is feminization of poverty as the uneven
distribution of resources between the sexes takes centre stage.
The unprecedented economic
decline in Zimbabwe has witnessed the emergence and growth of the
informal sector in leaps and bounds to the extent that it controls
a sizeable chunk in the national economy. In 2005, the Reserve Bank
of Zimbabwe cited formal sector employment as accounting for 16
% of the labour force, the informal economy for 40% and communal
sector for 44%, small to medium enterprises sector (SMEs), informal
and micro-enterprises sector accounted for an estimated 15-20% of
Gross Domestic Product in 2005. By 2007, the RBZ cites this sector
as accounting for more than 5% of GDP and being responsible for
the livelihood of about 80% of the population following the shrinkage
in the formal sector since the year 2000.
According to a study
by the Central Statistical Office (CSO), the number of households
living in poverty increased from 40.4 % on the eve of the Economic
Structural Adjustment Programme (ESAP) in 1990 to 63.3 % by the
end of the programme in 1995/1996 .It is widely believed that no
less than 80% of households in Zimbabwe are below the poverty datum
line.
In Zimbabwe micro, small
and medium scale enterprises are increasingly playing strategic
roles in national development. They have the potential of developing
linkages with large-scale industries if the desired turn around
of the economy occurs as is highly anticipated in the not too distant
future.
Unfortunately, like in
other countries, SMEs in Zimbabwe face a lot of challenges, chief
among them being lack of capital and difficulties in accessing credit
from the formal banking system due to lack of collateral security,
among other things. SMEs are usually financed by microfinance. Microfinance
is therefore central and critical to the development of SMEs and
attainment of national development goals.
Microfinance simply defined
refers to the provision of financial services and the management
of small amounts of money through a range of products and system
intermediary functions that are targeted at low-income clients.
It includes loans, savings, insurance, transfer services and other
financial products and services. Micro credit is one of the most
important products offered by micro-financial institutions for the
poor.
Globally, microfinance
has emerged as a leading and effective strategy for poverty reduction
with the potential for a far-reaching impact in transforming the
lives of the poor people, particularly women. It can go a long way
in contributing to the achievement of the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) as well as fulfillment of the national policy objectives
aimed at reducing hunger, empowering women, assisting vulnerable
groups, and improving standards of living of the general populace.
As pointed out by the then United Nations Secretary General, Kofi
.A. Annan when launching the International Year of Micro credit,
sustainable access to micro finance helps alleviate poverty by generating
incomes, creating jobs, allowing children to go to school, enabling
families to obtain health care and empowering people to make the
choices that best serve their needs.
Although microfinance
is not a panacea for poverty reduction and its related development
challenges, when properly harnessed it can make sustainable contributions
through financial investment leading to empowerment of the people,
which in turn promotes confidence and self esteem and dignity, particularly
with reference to women. Microfinance can have significant impact
on cross cutting issues such as women's empowerment, reducing the
spread of HIV/AIDS and environmental degradation as well as improving
social indicators such as education, housing and health.
Microfinance attracts
attention because it offers an alternative and increasingly popular
source of finance to the marginalized and it is welfare enhancing.
But its growth usually does not spring from market forces alone.
It is a deliberate interventionist strategy on the part of "social
investors" and sometimes the government. Some have argued that
microfinance is not sustainable because it is donor centered and
funded. The government of Zimbabwe recognizes the importance of
this sector and in that regard established the Ministry of Small
and Medium Enterprise Development that has a mandate of promoting
these enterprises.
The governor
of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) Dr Gideon Gono in his monetary
policy statement of April 2007 pointed out that, there is great
scope to rope in the rural and marginalized communities into mainstream
economy through deliberate policies to develop SMEs and promote
financial inclusion particularly at growth points The same monetary
policy statement points out that in Zimbabwe, the extent of rural
and peri-urban outreach by banks has largely remained low, to the
detriment of SME promotion and growth. The per capita banking facility
ratios in rural areas indicate unacceptable levels of financial
exclusion of the majority of Zimbabweans. It is therefore necessary
to strengthen the micro finance sector for it to play its expected
role effectively.
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fact sheet
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