tailieunhanh - Lecture Micro financing & micro leasing - An Introduction: Lecture 29

Lecture 29 - The emerging industry of inclusive finance. The following will be discussed in this chapter: Building the infrastructure for inclusive finance, financial sector liberalization, what makes a good enabling environment, the architecture for inclusion, licensing rules, market-determined interest rates. | Summary of the Last Lecture Private Equity for Microfinance TIAA-CREF and ProCredit. Sequoia and SKS. THE EMERGING INDUSTRY OF INCLUSIVE FINANCE BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR INCLUSIVE FINANCE: Poor financial infrastructure has historically been one of the biggest barriers to inclusive finance in less developed countries. As enabling conditions appear, however, far-reaching initiatives suddenly become feasible and financial institutions start new projects. BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR INCLUSIVE FINANCE: Within six years after the introduction of regulations allowing retailers to become banking agents in Brazil, the number of Brazilians with bank accounts nearly doubled. BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR INCLUSIVE FINANCE: Financial infrastructure means different things to different people. We think of it as the shared building blocks that allow institutions to deliver services. The building blocks include operating platforms such as ATM networks, smart card systems, and financial . | Summary of the Last Lecture Private Equity for Microfinance TIAA-CREF and ProCredit. Sequoia and SKS. THE EMERGING INDUSTRY OF INCLUSIVE FINANCE BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR INCLUSIVE FINANCE: Poor financial infrastructure has historically been one of the biggest barriers to inclusive finance in less developed countries. As enabling conditions appear, however, far-reaching initiatives suddenly become feasible and financial institutions start new projects. BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR INCLUSIVE FINANCE: Within six years after the introduction of regulations allowing retailers to become banking agents in Brazil, the number of Brazilians with bank accounts nearly doubled. BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR INCLUSIVE FINANCE: Financial infrastructure means different things to different people. We think of it as the shared building blocks that allow institutions to deliver services. The building blocks include operating platforms such as ATM networks, smart card systems, and financial software. BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR INCLUSIVE FINANCE: They also include institutional arrangements, such as credit reporting bureaus, clearing and settlement systems, rating agencies, and collateral registries. BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR INCLUSIVE FINANCE: Many of the most important arrangements are devoted to getting information about clients, transactions, and institutions into the right places at the right times. Other arrangements raise confidence about agreements between people or institutions. BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR INCLUSIVE FINANCE: The public and private sectors have distinct roles in building strong financial infrastructure, and the best environments come from a well-functioning partnership between both. While the public sector determines the regulatory framework— the rules of the game— BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR INCLUSIVE FINANCE: the private sector builds market mechanisms like credit information and technology. In the lecture that follow we will .