Financial Services and Poverty Reduction in Latin America and the Caribbean

Por César Bouillon, Pietro Masci, Luis Tejerina (12/06, En) Vea también Pobreza y Desigualdad

The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) has been increasing its focus on the critical links between poverty and sectors of the economy that traditionally have not been associated with poverty reduction, such as financial markets, regional integration, and trade policy. Recently the Bank has launched a new initiative called "Building Opportunities for the Majority", which includes financial democracy as one of the six priority areas for Bank activities in Latin America and the Caribbean.

This strategic emphasis on equitable access to financial services is expected to bring substantial benefits to promote productive investment, mitigate economic shocks, and reduce poverty. As the empirical evidence offered in the introductory chapter of this volume shows, there are many positive correlations between financial development, economic growth, and poverty reduction, suggesting a virtuous cycle of improved financial  sector activities, leading to greater savings, more investment in human capital, improved skill endowments, greater poverty reduction, and further positive impact on financial activities.

The need for financial democracy, and for financial products and services that can help the poor, is pressing. Consider these facts. Only 14.5 percent of poor households in Latin America and the Caribbean have a savings account and only 3.3 percent have access to credit (defined as the percentage of households that obtained a loan from a formal or semiformal financial institution in a 12-month period). At the same time, a huge and growing volume of remittances from migrant workers, representing a financial inflow of more than $60 billion per year into the region and more than 3 percent of regional GDP, only modestly involves the financial sector, weakening its potential impact on productive investment. The Bank's current approach recognizes that reducing poverty requires complementary actions in multiple sectors, and that in order to expand the economic opportunities and the productive potential of the poor, both their productive capital (human, physical, and financial) and their market environment opportunities must be improved.

The financial sector offers multiple instruments to improve the efficiency of capital allocation in the economy, and to help households manage their exposure to economic risk, including transaction banking, credit, savings, and insurance. Given the fact that economies in the region face considerable economic volatility -both aggregated and idiosyncratic- financial instruments, together with social insurance and protection systems, are particularly helpful in managing economic risk. Such risk is a major perpetuator of poverty, as several studies in this volume show. The work in this book strengthens the policy prescription that the promotion of equitable access to financial services "financial democracy" should be a major component of any strategy to eradicate poverty in the region.

This new approach to financial services contrasts with the more traditional and generally held perceptions that poverty alleviation mainly requires direct interventions in the social sectorsand no independent actions in other sectors. This new approach tries to enhance the ability of the poor to achieve higher living standards and escape poverty through their own efforts. In addition, by taking a more integral and multidimensional approach that goes beyond social sector issues, the Bank avoids the risk of marginalizing anti-poverty efforts by focusing exclusively on social policies.

This volume presents the papers submitted at the international conference on "Financial Services and Poverty Reduction in Latin America and the Caribbean", held at IDB Headquarters in September 2004. The conference brought together key stakeholders and experts from ten Latin American countries, who represented not only the financial sector but several social sectors, as well. The main objective of the conference was to increase the understanding of the links and transmission mechanisms between financial market activities and poverty reduction. At the same time, the conference sought to raise awareness in the region about the impact of financial sector markets, activities, and instruments on poverty reduction. Thus some papers developed a framework to analyze the mechanisms and linkages of how financial markets can contribute to alleviate poverty.

The conference focused on three main subjects regarding financial markets and poverty. The first subject addressed the links between access to financial products and the welfare of the poor. The second subject sought to identify policy priorities to improve the poor's access to financial services. The third subject was related to the role of the Bank in supporting countries in implementing policies and programs to increase the access of the poor to financial services. The conference participants generated a rich discussion on each of the studies presented, and most of their comments are included in this volume. Highlights of the consensus that emerged from the discussion during the conference include the following.

First, the positive indirect effects of financial deposit insurance on poverty reduction should be taken into consideration more fully. Financial deposit insurance can promote greater stability of the financial sector and thereby induce economic growth. It can also help make savings and banking more attractive to poor households that have been financial excluded and that can benefit from access to formal financial instruments to manage economic risk.

Second, adequate regulation of banking and microfinance plays a key role in expanding the availability of services to low-income populations. In particular, the specific nature of microfinance transactions (high transaction costs, geographical dispersion, lack of collateralization of loans) should be taken into account when regulating this segment.

Third, it is important to take better advantage of information technology to enhance the provision and affordability of financial services. Innovations such as the use of palm pilots and biometric instruments can help overcome geographical and language barriers. The development of efficient credit bureaus can lower transaction costs for institutions.

Fourth, the financial  literacy of poor clients needs to be addressed, to overcome language, educational, and geographical obstacles that were repeatedly mentioned during the conference as one of the key factors preventing successful experiences in microfinance.

Fifth, conference participants raised a cautionary note regarding efforts to implement successful experiences from other regions without taking into account the idiosyncratic characteristics and institutional context of Latin American countries. Ignoring this advice might make the adoption of these experiences less cost-effective or even unviable.

Finally, gaps in data and research need to be filled. The availability, opportunity, coverage, and comparability of empirical evidence about access to financial  markets at the household level needs to be improved. Many relevant questions about the potential benefits of financial services to poverty reduction remain unanswered because of lack of data in the region. Although the Bank has access to valuable information about access to financial  services for a limited number of countries and time periods, in the near future the Bank should give priority to promoting the systematic collection of statistical data about equitable access to financial services by IDB Regional countries, using specialized modules for household surveys and taking advantage of the regional network built by the MECOVI program with the region's National Statistics Institutes during the last decade. With a sustained effort on data collection, by 2010 the region should have a very complete picture of which countries are better off in terms of financial democracy and which have overcome financial exclusion. An area in which the Bank has started to work and that deserves more attention is the role of insurance to reduce uncertainty and spur productive economic activities.

We are confident that this volume contributes to the research and policy agendas in the region by providing policymakers, microfinance practitioners, academics, and other stakeholders with a rigorous analytical framework, useful empirical findings, and valuable comparative experiences and lessons. This publication reiterates the IDB's commitment to promote the implementation of policies and programs aimed at furthering financial democracy and reducing poverty.

 

Carlos Eduardo Vélez

Chief, Poverty and Inequality Unit

 

Pietro Masci

Chief, Infrastructure and Financial Markets Division

Ultima actualización: 08/05/07

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