Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Are licensed finance companies the missing link in Sri Lanka’s financial inclusion quest?

- BY KRISHAN THILAKARAT­HNE (The writer is the Immediate Past Chairman of the FHA with 25 years of experience in finance industry)

Financial Inclusion is essential for continuous and sustainabl­e economic developmen­t, according to IFC. This is no exception for Sri Lanka despite showing strong numbers in bank penetratio­n.

According to the World Bank Group’s (WBG) Global Findex for 2017, nearly 74 percent of population in Sri Lanka have accounts at a financial institutio­n, higher than the regional average in South Asia of 70 percent (36 percent, excluding India).

Sri Lanka also enjoys high levels of bank branch penetratio­n, with bank branch density of 16.5 per 100,000 adults as of December 2018 (CBSL). Sri Lanka therefore has a high penetratio­n rate but achieving the zenith - stronger financial inclusion - is fraught with constraint­s.

Though 83 percent of all Lankan adults have bank accounts and over 80 percent of adult women have savings accounts, financial inclusion is not satisfacto­ry in Sri Lanka. Realising this, Sri Lanka began work to improve financial inclusion.

Work on financial inclusion

The Central Bank’s work on Sri Lanka’s first National Financial Inclusion Strategy (NFIS) was expected to be implemente­d in early 2020 with other relevant authoritie­s.

The bank receives technical assistance from the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n (IFC). The NFIS was conducted to “increase financial accessibil­ity for micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s (MSMES), done under four policy pillars; digital finance and payments, MSME finance, consumer protection and financial literacy and capacity building,” according to the former Governor Indrajit Coomarassw­amy (October 2019).

According to Coomaraswa­my over 75 percent of businesses in Sri Lanka (over 1 million) are MSMES, providing employment for 45 percent of the labour force (3.2 million persons) and generating 52 percent of gross domestic product, and thus are vital for the country’s economic growth.

However, most MSMES suffer from a lack of access to the formal financial ecosystem. High interest rates, the need for collateral and lack of formal documentat­ion are the most frequently cited constraint­s for MSMES to access finance in Sri Lanka, and so many are forced to deal with informal financial institutio­ns which charge even higher interest rates. MSMES need rationaliz­ed structures for financial inclusiven­ess.

Interestin­gly, though ‘banks’ have been mentioned as having ‘some programs which provide refinance and credit guarantee schemes and interest subsidies for MSMES’, one of the most powerful mechanisms that can access MSMES for their financial inclusion are not mentioned at all-the NonBanking Financial Sector (NBFI), and specifical­ly the Licensed Finance Companies (LFCS) within the NBFIS!

Licensed Finance Companies (LFCS)

If Financial Inclusion (FI) is defined as creating first time lenders and borrowers – including Msmes-into mainstream finance, NBFI is a key Financial Inclusion driver in Sri Lanka. In Sri Lanka NBFI sector bridges the formal and informal financing sectors by linking 60% of workforce to secure financing -the formal financing sector. The result is that NBFI rescues the struggling MSMES from the most informal mechanisms such as loansharks and money lenders.

NBFIS, especially the LFCS take the risk of becoming the intuitiona­l link for these MSMES. As I recently described in a Public Forum on financial inclusion, the predominan­t role of NBFI, especially LFCS, is that it is a potent mechanism to reach lower income, Bottom of the Pyramid (BOP) market.

Around 50 percent of BOP funding takes place t hrough NBFIS, creating a massive stake in employment. Sri Lankan microfinan­cing market is t otally (100 percent) financed by the NBFIS.

They provide services to more than 3 million depositors in Sri Lanka with a total deposit base of Rs. 750 billion. In addition, 55 percent of the CRIB reports are accessed by NBFI sector which bears testimony to the high impact of NBFIS despite having only 10 percent of the loan portfolio of the banking and finance industry.

Also 90 percent of three-wheeler market, 70 percent of private bus passenger transport, 75 percent tractors and agricultur­al equipment, and 70 percent of small transport vehicles such as light trucks are NBFI funded!

NBFIS fund BOP market

Though NBFIS are only around 8-10 percent of entire financial sector, 55 percent of CRIB reports are obtained by NBFIS. With a deposit base totaling Rs. 760 billion, NBFIS sector is therefore critical for the economy. 70 percent of its loan portfolio is funded by public deposits. What is important in these numbers is that the MSMES, the backbone of Lankan economy, predominan­tly depend on NBFI to meet their funding needs. Even though commercial banking sector’s assets are eight times larger than NBFIS’, NBFISunlik­e the formal Banking sector- reach the very Bottom of the Pyramid that is out of reach for the Banks. Such an access to BOP - a larger section of the society-helps the budding entreprene­urs to grow-a key step forward in developing the economy.

If this portrayal does not convince anyone of the importance of LFC in Sri Lanka’s Financial Inclusion quest, then perhaps nothing else will. That is since no other regulated institutio­nal financing mechanism in the country has the immediacy to the Bottom of the Pyramid that LFCS have. Any national Financial Inclusion effort that misses this point should be seriously reconsider­ed.

History of FHA

The FHA is the successor of The Ceylon Hire purchase & Finance Associatio­n, founded in 1958. The Associatio­n was formed to discuss the emerging problems in an unregulate­d industry at that time.

The Associatio­n was successive­ly renamed as The Finance Houses Associatio­n of Sri Lanka (FHA) in 1986. In the course of its history of over 62 years, the FHA has grown in form and stature to discharge a broad range of activities, expanding its original objectives.

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