Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Re: [MFP] FaceBook and Microfinance - the parallels

 

Dear ex-colleagues, I should not intervene really, I have also moved away from the 'field' of MF except for my continuing role with M-Cril (and I've stopped many other things too) but not for the logical and deliberate reasons you all mention. It's more because I got involved in other things, such as 'our' 400 or so children in Odisha in India (ww.orissa.org.uk) and I thought there was not much I could add to MF. 

The 'baby' with which I had had some slight involvement since Kenya in the early 1970s (under other names) and Senegal and India in the 1990s and early 2000s has grown up in all manner of ways, as children (and grandchildren) do, some of which I admire, some of which bothered me, but it has gone far beyond my own 'poor power to add or detract' (if Lincoln will forgive me).  

But pioneers in any field (and I do not claim to be one), sometimes do have a tendency to deplore the way their babies have evolved, rather than to take proper and well deserved pride in the the independent routes they have taken. There are bad eggs (excuse the mixed metaphors) in what is now an enormous global activity, but on balance there is surely far more good than bad, and if MF had never become a profitable business it could surely never have grown as it has. 

Malcolm
On Tuesday, 30 June 2020, 20:17:32 BST, Sean Kline seankline@alumni.lse.ac.uk [MicrofinancePractice] <microfinancepractice@yahoogroups.com> wrote:


 

Yes, thanks Chuck. Agree..

 

I moved away from microfinance for similar reasons (though my version of your story replaces 'goats' with 'biking, bread and policy advocacy to address market failure in North America.)

 

Back in the 2000s I began to feel there had to be shifts to safeguard microfinance's promise for low-income communities:

(a) increased transparency of MFIs and their investors — thanks for your work!

(b) external government regulation — the real kind, not industry self-regulation compromised by conflicts of interest

(c) greater 'industry' emphasis on member-governed institutions (coops, ASCAs, ROSCAs, etc.) and, regardless of legal form, governance models that keep institutions (more than less) accountable to those they serve

 

In the end, given relatively weak government supervision, North American and European investors looking for aggressive returns, and a new era of practitioners conflating inclusion with positive impact, maybe the direction of microfinance was inevitable :  (

 

Sean

 

P.S. it's good to see Omidyar Network (+ this), Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes, and others fighting Facebook, Google, Amazon, Apple and other giants whose colossal size and power now undermines the interests of workers, environment, consumers and the integrity of American (and arguably others') democracy. Where did anti-trust go in the early 80s?!

 

P.P.S. Tim Ogden's relatively recent piece comparing the economic security challenges to those in the global south with those in North America is compelling.

 

From: <MicrofinancePractice@yahoogroups.com> on behalf of "Paul Rippey paulrippeypdx@gmail.com [MicrofinancePractice]" <MicrofinancePractice@yahoogroups.com>
Reply-To: <MicrofinancePractice@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Tuesday, June 30, 2020 at 9:56 AM
To: MicrofinancePractice <MicrofinancePractice@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: Re: [MFP] FaceBook and Microfinance - the parallels

 

 

Bravo Chuck for that essay. I have tried to say similar things but never got them on paper so well. 

 

A couple of tweaks I would make to personalize it so it would describe my own thoughts and experience:

 

Delete "goats". Insert "folk music".

Rant about advertising-driven toxic consumerism being the deadliest byproduct of capitalism.

 

Otherwise I wouldn't change a word. Thanks.

 

Paul

 

  




----------
On Tue, Jun 30, 2020 at 8:32 AM, "Chuck Waterfield chuck.waterfield@gmail.com [MicrofinancePractice]" <MicrofinancePractice@yahoogroups.com> wrote:

 

I left microfinance 5 years ago, I stopped using Facebook 3 years ago. The parallels between the two led me to the same decision with both.

 

These are the thoughts I had this morning as I was milking my goats, my new occupation, during which I usually enjoy the beautiful morning light and sounds and spend time with my animals. But the discussions of the past few days now force microfinance to percolate in my head even during milking time.

 

Here is my main point: I don't believe microfinance is rotton to the core; I don't believe FaceBook is an entirely evil conspiracy. But business pressures pushed both in the same directions and have created situations in which a large number of people who were formerly enthusiastic supporters have now left and forecast warnings that without external intervention things will do nothing but get worse.

 

The beginnings

At their inception, both were envisioned as innovative ways to reach the masses and provide them with services they would value; both told us that the services were very affordable compared to the alternatives, both told us that their mission was to create a path to viability, but they didn't say anything about plans to get ridiculous rich. The creation of FaceBook may have been motivated primarily by greed, but microfinance was absolutely never envisioned as something that would be lucrative. There was little hope of even covering expenses. We didn't measure ROE, we measured what percentage of our expenses were actually paid by income and were proud when we would be over 50%.

 

In their early days, both attracted smart, dedicated people who were drawn by the exciting idea of helping create something that had never been done and that could "change the world." Most chose to take salaries below what their market potential was, because they considered this a noble pursuit.

 

The transition

Both ended up reaching much higher scale than imagined. They both drew more public attention and they both drew in more professionals. The new wave of people came for a blend of motivations, and the clarity of the original vision began to blur.

 

With growth, management in both had to figure out how to make the numbers work. Scale was increasing, but expenses were increasing faster than income. Both went out in search of MBA-types to bring in and create solutions. Microfinance also invested in developing business skills internally, such as was done with my Microfin software and the 3,200 microfinance professionals that attended my 126 Business Planning courses from 1997 until 2013.

 

Both FaceBook and microfinance decided that increasing income was far easier than controlling expenses. FaceBook went big into advertisements and developed systems to spy on everything we did when inside FaceBook and even when not. And we users were for the most part unaware at the beginning. Microfinance decided hiding the true price was a no-brainer. In most countries, there were no rules against hiding the price, so true prices escalated while not appearing to do so. It got so confusing that even people inside the industry did not know what prices were truly being charged, or which MFIs in a market were less expensive.

 

FaceBook went from a being a financial puzzle - a nice idea with no viable future - to one of the most profitable businesses on the planet. Microfinance went from being a nice idea with no viable future to a strategy where institutions subsidize the early start-up years with free grant money and then flip from NGO project to a for-profit business cash cow where a handful of insider investors get stunningly rich without having had to take any prior risk.

 

And the problems escalate

FaceBook never anticipated becoming a tool used for manipulation and profiteering by groups of racists, scammers, terrorists, and political idealogues. Microfinance never anticipated becoming a home and a nameplate for the very payday lenders and userers that the industry was created to displace..

 

For example, the 400 payday lending businesses in South Africa, many quite large and quite profitable, create Micro Finance South Africa association (MFSA). Their average price charged is 350%. The dozen very small, struggling "true MFIs" (who charge prices "only" in the low- 100% range, create their own separate associaton..

 

A group of those involved early in creating FaceBook start to make noise about the shifts, the damage already being done, and the potential greater damage that could happen in the future. Those involved early in microfinance do the same. The debates started in the early 2000's with the "poverty lending" group vs the "massification" group. All hell broke lose in April 2007 with the 100% cashout IPO of Compartamos creating a 350-to-1 ROI for the tiny group of insider investors.

 

The search for solutions

In both FaceBook and microfinance, early warning arguments attracted a lot of attention and initiated a small number of initiatives for mid-course adjustments.. But the power of money won hands-down in both cases, at least has won so far. Those making the money argued for "free speech" in the case of FaceBook and for "free markets" in the case of microfinance.

 

You can do an internet search (I refuse to say "google") and find hundreds of articles with proposed solutions for Facebook, ranging from:

                • having FaceBook leadership make internal decisions to create increased societal good with lower short-term profit levels, or

                • creating a social media industry self-regulation group to make rules that limit the damage the members are inflicting, or

                • creating government regulation to define what is allowed and what is prohibited.

 

You can do the same search for solutions for microfinance, and you will find options like:

                • expect leadership of each institution to continue to show self-restraint, even though a few of their friends decided to get rich

                • have the industry collect data and publish it and expect peer pressure to motivate self-restraint

                • have the industry self-regulate and create a boundary between the ethical and the profiteers

                • change our name to financial inclusion so we don't get lumped together with the bad guys the media has labeled microfinance

                • finally start educating the regulators that we have been intentionally keeping in the dark because powerful industry people thought they would just "cause trouble"

 

With prolonged damage that went uncorrected, many professionals who were drawn to work in FaceBook and microfinance for their original visions began to walk away. Others chose to stay because of the portions of FaceBook and microfinance that still had positive impact. In both sectors, the focus on financial returns took priority over dealing with the collateral damage. FaceBook is still more than problematic; microfinance still is a muddle. Both have decisionmaking structures driven heavily by profit targets. Both might consider reducing social damage if it wouldn't reduce their profit-taking quite so much. In "real life," whether you call yourself double, triple, or even quadruple bottom line (e.g., Compartamos), when profit is one of those bottom lines it carries about 90% of the weight in decision making.

 

So lots of talk, lots of hand wringing, lots of clear examples of ugly things happening in some corners of FaceBook and some actors in microfinance. In both, some examples of good progress, like companies this week pulling their ads from FaceBook until FaceBook gets its act together, and like Indian microfinance behaving better because the RBI forces them to behave better. When I think through thepositive changes, I see they are generally imposed by external stakeholders and threaten the profit margin of the business unless the business complies. Again, that is essential a lesson of "real life."

 

Until there is far more external pressue on both that resolves the large (and growing) pockets of bad consequences, I will continue my abstinence of both FaceBook and microfinance. And with the inevitable takeover by digital finance, I'm not holding out any hope for the microfinance side.

 

Chuck Waterfield

Active 30 years in Microfinance from 1985 until 2015

__._,_.___

Posted by: MALCOLM HARPER <malcolm.harper@btinternet.com>
Reply via web post Reply to sender Reply to group Start a New Topic Messages in this topic (7)
WARNING! If you hit REPLY, your message will go to the entire listserve, not just the original author!

.

__,_._,___

No comments:

Post a Comment