INDIA: Microcredit Fights to Regain Credibility
As microcredit institutions - once touted as the vital ‘last mile’ in extending credit to poor rural women -fight a government backlash that has encouraged honest borrowers to turn defaulters, hopes for revival hinge on a new bill awaiting passage in India’s parliament.
Far from repaying their debts, borrowers are now demanding that microfinance institutions (MFIs) pay them back for charging interest at thrice the advertised rates.
'The MFIs must refund us half of the loans that we took seven to 10 years back, because they have taken repayment twice over with interest,' says Vijaya Kasipati, 32, a woman borrower in the village of Lachapet in southern Andhra Pradesh state.
'While offering a loan, MFIs often quote a 10 - 12 percent ‘flat’ rate of interest, which appears like a good deal. But, this flat rate of interest is not calculated on the new, reduced balance,' explains Jamuna Paruchuri, advocacy director at the Andhra Pradesh government’s Society for Elimination of Rural Poverty (SERP).
'What the fine print says is that even after the borrower has paid a few instalments, the interest would still continue to be calculated on the initial sum borrowed, and not on the balance of the loan amount. The result is a hidden final rate of interest of around 36 percent,' Paruchuri told IPS.
SERP, which works with more than 11 million women in 994,595 self-help groups (SHGs) in 22 Andhra Pradesh districts, is eminently qualified to comment on MFI operations. 'The SHG women are not repaying. They say the MFIs have already taken repayments many times over by cheating them,' says Paruchuri, who, after a spate of suicides in 2010, was tasked with finding out from indebted women and their SHGs what went wrong.
Elaborating on the modus operandi of MFIs, Paruchuri says loans are recovered on a weekly basis and follow 52-week time schedules. 'By the 25th week when the borrowers would have repaid half the loan with interest, the MFIs convince them to take a second loan — often the very same repaid amount. 'As a result, the borrowers go on paying interest on the initial total sum borrowed, plus on the second loan, and end up paying 72 percent interest.'
'In effect the borrowers got caught in a debt trap says,' says Sudhirendar Sharma, a former World Bank consultant. 'Although the original idea of microcredit was to save poor rural people from the clutches of local moneylenders, many of them ended up being hopelessly indebted to a new class of moneylenders.'
With debt-ridden farmers committing suicide in droves, the Andhra Pradesh government was compelled to move legislation in the state assembly on Oct. 14, 2010, banning the weekly collection of repayments by thuggish agents hired by the MFIs. The Andhra Pradesh Micro Finance Institutions (Regulation of Money Lending) Ordinance, 2010, in its preamble, talked of the need to protect the interests of the SHGs which it acknowledged were 'being exploited by private MFIs.'
Repayments plummeted overnight and the commercial banks, which lent money to the MFIs, stopped further disbursements. As the MFIs stopped lending, they also retrenched staff and the sector quickly plunged into a crisis. Worse, impoverished farmers were driven back to traditional moneylenders for badly needed credit.
'As the last mile, door-step credit provider in rural outbacks where banks do not want to operate, we are irreplaceable,' says Mohammed Nooruddin Amin, chief of Adhikar, a non-government organisation based in Orissa, which launched a microcredit arm in 2004. 'The long-winded procedures that banks follow for sanctioning loans deter the poor and uneducated from approaching them,' he added explaining the indispensability of MFIs.
© Inter Press Service (2011) — All Rights Reserved. Original source: Inter Press Service
Where next?
Browse related news topics:
Read the latest news stories:
- Instability, war and closed borders: How aid workers get emergency food to hungry Afghan children Saturday, June 13, 2026
- Health Emerges as a Strategic Frontline for Africa Ahead of Bonn Climate Conference Friday, June 12, 2026
- Africa Needs a Radical Plan to Tackle 15M Youth Job Crisis Friday, June 12, 2026
- BOTSWANA: ‘Court Rulings Matter, but It’s Sustained Civic Action That Turns Them into Real Protection’ Friday, June 12, 2026
- Ocean Economy Reaches $2.5 Trillion as Services Become the Largest Share of Ocean Trade Friday, June 12, 2026
- Africa Pushes for Data Sovereignty and Digital Independence Friday, June 12, 2026
- Security Council weighs future of UN war crimes mechanism as closure nears Friday, June 12, 2026
- Women and girls caught up in Yemen’s ‘forgotten crisis’ bear the heaviest toll as funding falls Friday, June 12, 2026
- More strikes impact Lebanon hospitals as humanitarian situation deteriorates Friday, June 12, 2026
- UN ‘encouraged’ by talk of possible US-Iran ceasefire deal Friday, June 12, 2026
Learn more about the related issues: