Recent Blogs
Blog
Towards Behaviorally-informed Financial Consumer Protection
Behavioral economics is the science of human decision-making and how people’s biases and weaknesses can lead them to make harmful economic decisions.Blog
An Independent MFI Board Adds Great Value: Lessons From Pakistan
If a microfinance bank wishes to be successful then both the management team and the board must be picked with quality in mind.Blog
Mobiles – A Mass-Customizable Financial Tool?
A financial service for the base of the pyramid must, at its core, help people with their financial planning. This notion can help articulate the logic of user interface design. A provider that helps people plan better will be in a better position to promote its own financial products.Blog
MFI Shareholders And Directors Can Help Achieve Social Goals
As MFIs try to unravel industry expectations on social performance, there is often a missing piece in MFIs’ internal functioning.Blog
Unlocking Barriers: Advances in Rural Mobile Banking in Mexico
Telecomm is a decentralized government agency that operates the telegraph services, bridges data connectivity across the territory, and offers financial services such as domestic and international remittances, as well as bill payments. It has decided to launch a pilot program which seeks to close the three most common gaps in financial inclusion: technological infrastructure, channels and products.Blog
Graduation and Social Protection in Latin America
One of the biggest challenges of social public policy is how to design effective programs for the large number of poor and extreme poor households who cannot access the contributive social security system.Blog
INOVA: Oasis of Innovation in the West African Desert
INOVA is the first e-money issuer authorized by the central bank in Burkina Faso to offer services of its kind. It is the first company to have a top-notch platform for the Inovapay wallet developed and implemented in the developing world, offering services that are multi-channel, multi-operator, multi-currency, multi-lingual, and multi-institutional.Blog
Wari: A Local Platform Heads to the Global Market
This post is the second of a three-part series this week on the CGAP and the Mobile Money for the Unbanked blogs on the topic of mobile financial services in francophone West Africa. Partnerships in new markets have been critical to the success of their strategy and so far, it seems to be working. Wari conducts around 1.5 million transactions per day or 40 million transactions per month, the vast majority of which is occurring outside of Senegal.Blog
Senegal: A Unique Ecosystem of Branchless Banking in West Africa
Ecosystem is a popular word that is increasingly thrown around financial inclusion circles in the last couple years…and for good reason. To provide a range of financial services to various segments of the unbanked population, one provider, one delivery channel and one business model will never be sufficient. As we looked around the conference room at the BCEAO, it was clear that an ecosystem was emerging in Senegal.Blog
Understanding What Works: Why Qualitative Research Matters
Why invest in qualitative research, given the rigorous impact results from the RCTs? Taking a long, deep look into the lives of program participants is essential for understanding the nuances behind the RCT results.Blog
Multiplying the Graduation Experience: Vision and Practical Ideas
Today, the Graduation model, inspired by BRAC’s program in Bangladesh, has achieved success by showing how to move ultra poor households in Haiti, India, Pakistan, and Honduras out of extreme poverty and by giving them hope that they can improve their current standard of living.Blog
Designing Financial Products for “Bolsa Familia” Beneficiaries
Closer examination of the financial lives of the 13 million households receiving Bolsa Familia, shows huge variations in the way they manage their money. Although commonly grouped under the single heading of Bolsa Familia recipients, this part of Brazilian society is actually a collection of sub-groups with different financial needs and wants.Blog
From Micro To Small: Do MFIs Have The Capacity To Serve Small Enterprises?
Many policymakers are focusing a lot of attention on small enterprises, in the hope that they could play an important role in creating much needed jobs. Also, many donors and investors view small enterprises as potential investees and engines of private sector growth.Blog
Ten Lessons for Multiplying the Graduation Model
With half of the 10 CGAP-Ford Graduation Program pilots now completed and a significant collection of evidence showing the effectiveness of this approach, how do we begin to scale up?Blog
Good News for the Ultra Poor
We have seen promising results from the CGAP-Ford Foundation Graduation pilot programs targeting the “ultra-poor” demographic – the most vulnerable families, living in the bottom 15% of their economy, which for years have been among the hardest to reach by development interventions.Blog
Does Branchless Banking Satisfy the Needs of Ghanaian Consumers?
As we saw in the first post on the CGAP survey results from urban and semi-urban Ghana, the basic market conditions for branchless banking services appear good and there are three mobile money deployments, one government entity and one independent provider active in the market. This post will outline the results that form the basis for that belief and draw some conclusions for the providers going forward.Blog
Creating Pathways for the Poorest: Graduation Model Shows Early Promise
The CGAP-Ford Foundation Graduation Program is a global effort to create pathways for the poorest out of extreme poverty by carefully sequencing safety nets, livelihoods and access to finance, inspired by BRAC in Bangladesh.Blog
You Can’t Go Cash-Lite on Empty Accounts: E-money vs. Cash
Getting people to reach for their bank card or mobile phone at the store check-out requires giving them good reasons to store their money electronically.Blog
Beyond Capital Gains: The Multiplier Effect of Youth Savings
The toll of deep financial strain often promotes destructive decisions and low productivity among impoverished populations.Blog