Type | Book Section - Serving the poorest of the poor: the poverty impact of the Khushhali Bank’s microfinance lending in Pakistan |
Title | Poverty strategies in Asia: a growth plus approach |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2006 |
Page numbers | 222-244 |
URL | http://econpapers.repec.org/RePEc:elg:eebook:4247 |
Abstract | Although Pakistan’s economy enjoyed relatively stable growth during the 1990s, poverty and income inequality continued to rise;1 the most recent official estimates are that roughly one-third of the population was below the poverty line at the start of the millennium (GOP, 2003a: 12) (see Chapter 7 for more details). In response to these widely cited figures, the government of Pakistan established poverty reduction as its overarching objective and, recognizing the potential role of microfinance in alleviating poverty, embarked on a Microfinance Sector Development Program (MSDP) to broaden and deepen the microfinance sector to provide a broad range of financial services in a sustainable manner. Microfinance is still relatively new to Pakistan, both in concept and practice. Prior to embarking on the new program, the main providers of microfinance were NGOs2 and government sponsored rural support networks3 or, in at least one case, a traditional commercial bank with a specialized microfinance window. With the exception KASHF, a well-known NGO operating out of Lahore, none of these institutions are specialized microfinance institutions and none have demonstrated financial sustainability (Pakistan Microfinance Network 2003).4 Despite the achievements of these institutions,5 their total outreach is still less than 5 per cent of the estimated 5.6 million poor households in Pakistan that require micro- finance services (see Table 8.1). To reach these un-served households, in 2001 the government of Pakistan established a regulatory framework that promotes the rapid expansion of microfinance throughout the country. The effect of this legislation has been to dramatically increase the outreach of microfinance in Pakistan. The Khushhali Bank, a retail microfinance bank established inAugust 2000, was the first licensed microfinance bank established under the MSDP, and the bank now serves over 230 000 active clients: more than the number of clients reached by all the NGOs and rural support programs in total before 2001.6 It has achieved this substantial outreach while remaining commercially oriented and focused on achieving financial sustainability. In addition to Khushhali Bank, there are now several other licensed microfinance banks7 in Pakistan and others are in the process of applying. This chapter examines empirically the poverty impact of Pakistan’s microfinance sector development program by looking at the impact of Khushhali Bank’s lending program on the welfare of poor households in the country. It does this by drawing on the results of an original national household survey undertaken specifically for this purpose during 2005. |
» | Pakistan - Integrated Household Survey 2001-2002 |