DUSHANBE, May 20, 2011, Asia-Plus – International Finance Corporation (IFC) supported a conference in Prague, organized by Microfinance Center (MFC), to reorient microfinance towards a balanced growth that will help to increase access to finance for microentrepreneurs and the general population in Europe and Central Asia, press release issued by FC says.
IFC Azerbaijan & Central Asia Microfinance Transformation Support Project sponsored the Microfinance Annual Conference in Prague from May 18 through May 20 in order to let many microfinance players from Europe and Central Asia participate in a knowledge-sharing and learning event. The conference brought together microfinance players, policymakers, donors, and investors for sessions on transformation, over-indebtedness, dealing with fraud, and social performance.
“The financial crisis exposed the cracks in the system that were building up over time and offered many lessons and opportunities for improvement. It is now time to review our expectations towards microfinance and what microfinance can realistically deliver,” said Grzegorz Galusek, head of MFC. “The conference will offer an opportunity for debate and reflection on how to revert to the core principles of microfinance.”
Praised for job creation and poverty alleviation, microfinance is now blamed for the indebtedness of clients and other misfortunes of poor people. The criticism and disappointment with microfinance grew almost proportionately with its rapid growth. Outreach to the poor quickly became an insufficient outcome, and microfinance was soon required to be sustainable, profitable, commercial, investable, transparent, and responsible.
“IFC works to improve livelihoods of people living in emerging markets by expanding financial inclusion and increasing access to finance for the poor,” said Rolf Behrndt, Regional Business Line Leader Financial Markets of IFC Advisory Services in Eastern Europe and Central Asia.
The IFC Azerbaijan and Central Asia Microfinance Transformation Support Project is being implemented over five years with financial support from IFC, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands, and Oesterreichische Entwicklungsbank to support microfinance institutions in Azerbaijan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Kazakhstan in their corporate transformation processes and to improve the regulatory framework for microfinance in the region.
MFC is a grassroots network of 110 member institutions that plays an active role in shaping the microfinance industry in Europe and Central Asia. All members share an interest in microfinance, as providers of financial services, capital or technical assistance. MFC plays a catalyst role in bridging the market gap between dramatic unmet demand for microfinance services and the sector current offering through supporting development of a wide range of financial institutions, promoting microfinance among policy makers, regulators, formal banking sector and investors. It supports members in different country contexts – from EU member states, through fast-developing Caucasian states to the poorest countries in Central Asia.