NGOs, micro-finance and poverty alleviation: experience of the rural poor in Pakistan.
Mustafa, Khalid ; Gill, Zulfiqar Ahmad ; Azid, Toseef 等
INTRODUCTION
Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) continue to be the global
'flavour of the month' in international development. They are
regarded as "outside" actors perceived to work in the
interests of the poor, and in the absence of the state, many NGOs have
taken on vital role in the provision of basic services to the poor. The
institutional and political environment is attuned to privatisation in
whatever form it takes. NGOs are another expression of this trend, but
in the case of NGOs no real disillusionment phase has yet set in. But
still NGOs remain the favoured vehicle for grass-roots involvement and
community development in many countries.
The present paper seeks to delineate the role of NGOs in micro
finance and study their aggregate impact on poverty reduction in rural
Pakistan as a result of micro finance efforts. The paper is organised in
four sections. Section I commences with the concepts, promises and
limitations of NGOs as a vehicle of micro finance. Section II summarises
the record of performance of NGOs in Pakistan. In particular, the role,
achievements and set-backs of two noted NGOs in Pakistan, Agha Khan
Rural Support Programme (AKRSP) and National Rural Support Programme
(NRSP). Which are studied by examining aggregate impact of these NGOs on
poverty reduction as result of their micro finance efforts. Section III
examines the poverty profile and presents summary of the role of NGOs in
the context of poverty lending and, finally Section IV concludes the
analysis and proposes some policy recommendations.
I. NGOS, MICRO CREDIT, AND POVERTY: SOME CONCEPTUAL ISSUES
In its simplest form, an NGO is a body of people who come together
to provide help to those who fail to accumulate sufficient resources to
survive. In its most ambitious form, an NGO is a private, not-for-profit
institution dedicated to influencing the working structure of government
and ensure the greater welfare of all citizens.
NGOs emerged in real numbers only after the second world war,
concurrent with the dismantling of former colonies. Many such
organisations have evolved from anti-colonial independence movements and
are now dedicated to the upliftment of the poor and implicitly recognise
that government alone can never solve the problems of poverty in general
and of destitutes in particular.
The poor people in the developing world manage to mobilise
resources to develop their enterprises and their dwellings rather slowly
over time. Provision of credit could enable the poor to leverage their
initiative, accelerating the process of building incomes, assets and
economic security. However, conventional finance institutions seldom
lend down-market to serve the needs of low-income families and
women-headed households. They are very often denied access to credit for
any purpose, making the discussion of the level of interest rate and
other terms of finance irrelevant. Therefore the fundamental problem is
not so much of unaffordable terms of loan as the lack of access to
credit itself [Mustafa (1992) and Ghate et al. (1992)].
Successful experiences in providing finance to small entrepreneur
and producers demonstrate that the poor people, when given access to
responsive and timely financial services at market rates, repay their
loans and use the proceeds to increase their income and assets. This is
not surprising since the only realistic alternative for them is to
borrow from informal market at an interest much higher than market
rates. Community banks and grassroots savings and credit groups around
the world have shown that the micro-enterprise loans can be profitable
for borrowers and for the lenders, making micro-finance one of the most
effective poverty reducing strategy [Aziz (2000)].
It has been argued that in most organisations designed to provide
intermediary services between government, or resource providers for
grass-roots development, power tends to be skewed towards the small
minority that already holds more resources (usually land). This minority
uses its power to pre-empt, for its own use, the bulk of scarce and
valuable resources provided by governments. Consequently, the poorest
(marginal and landless people) tend to drift away from these
organisations because they have nothing to offer them. Then, the clear
message for NGO is the importance of involving poor people in the
governance and the delivery of the services for which the NGO has been
created [Uphoff (1982)].
Two approaches have been advocated on the role of credit in poverty
reduction. The supporters of the 'income-generation approach'
maintain that credit should be provided mainly to the entrepreneurial
poor to enable them to finance specific private income-generating
activities to increase their revenues, while the proponents of the
so-called 'new mini malist approach' argue that credit
programmes would still be helping the poor fight poverty by giving
credit to any poor person who is able to repay a loan without dictating
to that person how and on what the loan should be used. Some studies
have pointed out that the problem of the non-productive use of credit,
as advocated by the minimalist approach, lies in the fact that by
consuming rather than investing their loans, the actions of such
borrowers, if imitated by other poor people, could produce a negative
impact on the future growth of microcredit [ADB (1999) and Yaron
(1992)].
Several NGOs in many countries (e.g. Bangladesh, India and Kenya)
have succeeded in reaching the poorest of the poor by devising
innovative strategies. These include the provision of small loans to
poor people, especially in rural areas, at full-cost interest rates,
without collateral, that are repayable in frequent installments.
Borrowers are organised into groups, which reduces the risk of default.
These are also effective mechanisms through which to disseminate
valuable information on ways to improve the health, legal rights,
sanitation and other relevant concerns of the poor. Above all, many
micro-credit programmes have targeted one of the most vulnerable groups
in society-women who live in household that own little or no assets. The
provision of opportunities for self-employment to these women, have lead
to the conclusion in case of many that studies such programmes have
significantly increased women's security, self-confidence and
status within the household [HDC (1999) and Narayan (2000)].
The development thinking is now characterised by a more pragmatic
and cautious approach by NGOs. But on the government side, there is a
reluctant admission to the idea that NGOs can play a useful role in
stimulating grassroots involvement of the people in government
development planning and implementation. By collaborating with NGOs,
governments can mobilise the support of local people and local resources
to ensure that the costs of delivering government-supported development
projects are sustainable and appropriate to the circumstances of the
intended beneficiaries. This scenario of NGO involvement in development
process is characterised by being less conflicting, a reduced
adversarial mode of operation, and an advocacy approach to the pursuit
of justice and greater resources for the poor [Narayan et al. (1999) and
HDC (1999)].
II. NGO DEVELOPMENT IN THE CONTEXT OF MICRO-FINANCE LENDING IN
PAKISTAN
Experience shows that small credits play a significant role in
poverty eradication. Also, when these loans are used by women, the
benefits have been observed to include better education and food and
health care for their families. On the other hand, men have the tendency
to utilise a substantial amount of their income outside their homes, on
social activities and personal enjoyments.
Rural supports programme (RSP) have been initiated by the Govt. of
Pakistan in order to improve the social and economic conditions of the
rural masses. The largest among these is the National Rural Support
Programme (NRSP) followed by the Sindh Rural Support Corporation (SRSC),
Balochistan Rural Support Programme (BRSP) and Punjab Rural Support
Programme (PRSP). All these follow the successful model of Aga Khan Rural Support Programme (AKRSP) based in Pakistan's Northern Areas
and Chitral. Performance of two of these Programmes-Aga Khan Rural
Support Programme (AKRSP) and the National Rural Support Programme
(NRSP) is critically assessed in the following pages.
The Aga Khan Rural Support Programme (AKRSP)
The Aga Khan Rural Support Programme (AKRSP), a non-profit project
initiated by the Aga Khan Foundation, started operating in 1982 to
improve the extremely poor socio-economic conditions of about one
million inhabitants of Pakistan's five northern mountain districts.
AKRSP derives its success from a two pronged focus on
institution-building and community participation.
AKRSP has worked to accomplish its mission through several types of
operations, including: (1) organising village-level institutions; (2)
funding physical infrastructure projects; (3) promoting natural resource
management in agriculture, livestock and forestry; (4) training and
human resource development; and (5) marketing and enterprise
development. By the end of 1994, 1,834 Village Organisations (VOs) and
763 Women's Organisations (WOs) had been established with 101,304
total members. These VOs and WOs covered over two-thirds of the rural
households in the programme area. In addition, 1,501 productive physical
infrastructure projects had been initiated to the benefit of 85189
households; 986 training courses had been given to villagers, 200
hectares of forest and more than 2,000 forest nurseries had been
established; and nearly 2.5 million fruit trees had been planted [HRD and NRSP (1998)].
Since its start and through 1994, the total expenditure of the
AKRSP programme has been US$7.4 million. The funds are largely arranged
from donors and the Aga Khan Foundation network provided 65 percent of
the funds in the programme's first year, which declined to 30
percent in the 1984-87 period, and to 7 percent in 1991-94 (see Table
1).
The provision of saving and loan services is central to the many
other instruments used by AKRSP to accomplish its mission. Savings
services have been offered since the programme's inception,
however, AKRSP's credit operations did not begin until 1989. As of
the end of 1995, AKRSP had mobilised $7.5 million in deposits and had
$5.6 million in outstanding loans. AKRSP's financial services reach
more than 100,000 households-over-two-thirds of Pakistan's
estimated rural population in the programme areas [World Bank (1996).]
Loan and deposit services are not part of every AKRSP activity,
however, they are integral parts of VO/WOs. Cumulative (to the end of
1994) loan disbursements totaled Rs 350 million. The outstanding loan
portfolio at the end of 1994 was Rs 123 million and the deposit balance
was Rs 211 million. As part of AKRSP's inception, provisions were
made for small-sized loans from AKRSP to the VO/WOs for distribution to
members; and medium-sized loans were taken primarily by the VOs
themselves. AKRSP introduced obligatory savings to mobilise capital and
the use of credit from village organisations to assist small farmers.
Later on, AKRSP shifted its focus to village organisation/women's
organisation credit programmes (VOCP/WOCPs) that linked amounts borrowed
to money saved. The VOCP/WOCPs made savings a more attractive
proposition. AKRSP launched a micro enterprise programme. This is a
considerable departure from the basis on which AKRSP had historically
allocated credit and the micro enterprise programme has been far more
risky. It was followed in 1995 by a new programme of corporate and
commercial credit designed to support enterprises linked directly with
village and women's organisation commercial interests [World Bank
(1996)].
The credit programme that AKRSP initially promoted involved short
and medium term loans. The principal type of short term loans featired
same 1983 are for fertiliser. While these are not collateralised,
applicants must be approved by their Vos and the VO savings are a sort
of informal collateral in a transaction which requires AKRSP approval.
Crop marketing loans are 100 percent collaterised by the borrower's
savings. These are used to facilitate sale at an advantageous time,
enabling VO/WOs members to obtain better prices than if they sell their
crop just after harvest, in a typical case, a very high proportion of VO
members may qualify and receive short-term loans.
The medium term loans, issued since 1985, were 30 percent secured
by time deposit receipts representing VO/WO deposits at commercial banks
or similar institutions (the rest being underwritten by AKRSP). They
were meant to take advantage of the irrigation provided by the PPIs and
were used for sulphur tents for apricot drying, for agricultural
machinery and other rural activities. The maturities on these loans were
for two to five years. They were issued by AKRSP to VOs, rather than to
individual borrowers. These have been virtually discontinued because of
poor performance, either because of ineffective handling by VOs or
issued for inappropriate technologies.
The Village Organisation Credit Programme (VOCP) of ARKSP involves
a number of conditions: all short term and medium term loans have to be
paid off and the VO must have a generally good repayment record as well
as sufficient trained management. Also, VO savings must exceed Rs 50,000
to be eligible for the minimum loan amount of Rs 50,000. Maturities on
loans to members can be as short as three months and do not exceed one
year, although roll-overs are possible. Unlike the Village Organisation
Credit Programme (VOCP), Women Organisation Credit Programme (WOCP)
dispenses credit with the minimum Rs 50,000 savings balance requirement
and there is no minimum loan size requirement for a WO (see Table 2).
With the VOCP/WOCP structure, credit operations of AKRSP have been
decentralised: VOs and WOs take on the responsibility for approving and
issuing loans to members. Frequently, groups delegate loan approval
authority to a credit committee consisting of up to seven members. The
programme also links loan amounts to savings. The VO/WO can borrow from
AKRSP up to a limit--making all loans fully secured by members' own
savings balance, plus that of his or her guarantors when the loan is
larger than the borrower's own savings balance. To be eligible for
the programme, groups must also establish a reserve fund, distribute
profit proportionately to savings and remunerate officers for their
services.
Part of the contract between a community and AKRSP is the formation
of a VO and the undertaking by members to make a deposit at every
meeting, which is usually semi-monthly. Some VOs agree on a minimum
deposit (such as Rs 5) and other allow members to decide upon the amount
which can vary over time. In those cases where an equal amount of
savings are prescribed, this may be a symbol of solidarity or, less
positively, a way to exclude the poorest members of the community. VOs
have a membership in the hundreds whereas WOs, which follow the same
system, usually have 30-35 members. For both, savings efforts have
produced impressive results (see Table 3).
Certain procedures have been used by AKRSP to ensure transparency
and also to focus on members' performance. Individual members are
supposed to be informed of their savings balances at each meeting.
Members are supposed to be apprised of any changes in the status of
their collective savings and investment in a bank time deposit; for
example, about the profits or interest earned on these assets, and about
any pledges against these that have been used to secure VO/WO
borrowings. Final statements of accounts are to be prepared every six
months and these have to be submitted to the VO or WO for its approval.
Books are to be audited at least once a year by an AKRSP Field
Accountant. Although AKRSP core staff have been entrusted the task for
overall guidance and control central records and systems, they often
depend upon the records of Village Accountants and the Field Accounts.
It was reported that one third of the VO/WOs lacked village account
assistance and the Field Accountants were still too few to implement
accounting controls effectively [Potter and LeBreton (1992)].
The AKRSP started lending at 8 percent rate after the closure of
interest free loan policy in 1988, as service charge and was equal to
the interest paid by commercial banks on profit and loss sharing
accounts. VO/WOs add additional 5 percent to cover their own
administrative costs for purposes such as payment to the manager and to
create reserve for contingencies. In addition, most VO/WOs follow the
Programme's advise that an additional fee be added to reward
savers. As such, twelve percent per year has been recommended, but those
actual charged have ranged from zero to 24 percent, resulting in total
service charges to the borrowers that range from 12 to 36 percent, with
a median of 24 percent consisting of 7 percent to AKRSP, 5 percent for
overheads and 12 percent to reward savers [Word Bank (1995)].
It is perhaps the result of higher rates charged to borrowers that
repayment performance of members in VOs/WOs of AKRSP has tended to
deteriorate over time. This trend is most noticeable as the recovery
rate have slid from 98 percent in 1983 to some 77 percent in Gilgit and
its sorroundings during 1991-93. Amongst others, causes of generally
declining repayment performance may be attributed to (a) decreasing
intensity of AKRSP activities in a village over time; (b) rational
selection of lowest risk activities at the outset and gravitation toward
larger, riskier ventures over time; (c) borrowers probing the effects of
delays in repayment coupled with; (d) AKRSP's reluctance to move
forcibly and its proclivity to try and reach a solution through
dialogue, which is possibly the only recourse when loans are unsecured;
(e) lack of a plan devised to deal with loans affected by catastrophic
situations such as communal strife; and finally (f) limits to growth of
economic activity in the area which are a function of human resources,
and the area's continued isolation from the rest of the country
[World Bank (1996)].
To sum up, the three hallmarks of AKRSP's success are the
organisation's community focus, saving emphasis, and flexible
operations. These are the features that are perhaps most often attempted
to be replicated in other areas, of Pakistan. One of AKRSP's
successes has been its ability to attract and retain sufficient
qualified and dedicated staff to maintain the development of the
programme and expansion of its operations. Its recruitment efforts have
been focused on the local populations; its development results have been
tangible; and its salary structure has been attractive, especially in
its rewarding of outstanding employees (see Table 4).
AKRSP's saving and credit operations have been dependent on
the formation and functioning of VOs and WOs. The energy and health of
the VOs/WOs however appear to be major determinants of savings levels
and credit use, and of the quality of the credit portfolio. At the same
time successful savings and credit operations reinforce the strength and
sustainability of the VOs/WOs.
It may be pertinent to sum up:
"The AKRSP has contributed significantly to rapid economic
growth and development in Northern Pakistan. Results of the periodic
Farm Household Income and Expenditure Surveys conducted by the AKRSP
show that per-capita income in the programme area has increased by
almost 55 percent during 1991-97. As a result of this significantly
higher rate of increase in incomes in the area compared to the rest of
the country, per capita incomes in Northern Pakistan as a proportion of
national per capita incomes has increased from 35 percent to 56 percent
in the same period. Because of this rapid economic growth, the poverty
level in the area, as measured by standard poverty line definitions,
decreased from 49 percent of the population in 1991 to 32 percent in
1997. At the same time, the Gini coefficient, a measurement of income
inequality, exhibited a small decline from 0.37 in 1991 to 0.36 in 1997,
indicating that the significant economic growth in Northern Pakistan was
not accompanied with higher levels of income inequality" [Pakistan
(2000)].
National Rural Support Programme (NRSP)
The National Rural Support Programme (NRSP) was set up as a public
limited company under the Companies Act of 1984 in November 1991. Its
conceptual basis is the organisational model of the Aga Khan Rural
Support Programme (AKRSP). At the heart of this model lies the vision of
building up the collective strength of the poor through social
organisation. The institutional capacity of the organisation is
predicated upon capital formation through collective savings and human
resource development through training of village specialists.
NRSP has helped rural communities in eight districts of Pakistan to
establish 4988 Community Organisations (COs), of which 3250 are male,
1292 female, and 446 mixed COs: upto April 1998. Mixed COs are often
formed in those communities where a group of distant or close relatives
get together, or where the segregation of sexes is not very rigid. The
risk in all these cases is that male domination does not allow the full
participation of females. [HRD and NRSP (1998)].
The membership of the COs increased from 10,975 in 1993 to 116595
in 1998. The average membership in a community organisation, however,
has fallen from 30 to 22. The reduced average size of the CO is a
reflection of the fact that the COs have applied their rules of
membership quite strictly and excluded inactive members from their
rosters. Also, some members probably the local influential apparently
left on their own accord because they did not see direct benefits, which
in any case they could easily derive from non-participatory programmes
and projects. It was reported that in one-third of the COs the
membership base had shifted towards the poor; one-fifth of the COs had
provided a safety net to the needy households; and an equal proportion
of the COs had taken special initiatives in local management [Mumtaz
(1997); HRD and NRSP (1998)].
it is reported that most CO members generally do not participate in
the decisions made by the general body, which is required to meet twice
a month, though they like the idea of regular assembly and see some
benefit of saving regularly, even in small amounts. However, they are
unsure about the central idea of the CO: each members should be willing
to sacrifice in some form for the collective good through which, alone
his/her individual welfare is best served. There are often wrong
expectations of the partnership with NRSP, in which the CO is seen
simply as a convenient arrangement to receive benefits. Many CO members
are not aware of the major decisions made in the general body even
though they were present. Similarly, they are often unaware of their
savings in the CO account (see Table 5).
NRSP considers capital formation through CO savings as one of the
three 'cornerstones'. Each CO is left to determine the amount
of savings that its members will be required to make regularly at each
meeting. This flexible approach is better in that it accommodates
differences between and within the COs. The total CO savings at the end
of 1998 were Rs 79.89 million, including the amounts pledged as
collateral for loans from NRSP. The average savings per CO and member
were Rs 16016.44 and Rs 685.19 respectively. It should be noted that,
unlike some other rural support programmes such as AKRSP, NRSP did not
link the CO savings to free inputs or grants for physical and social
infrastructure. It has imposed no conditions on the CO to achieve a
certain level of savings before the real partnership could begin.
The basic purpose of the credit policy of NRSP is to bridge the gap
between what the small farmers and the rural poor need and what is
accessible to them. Loans are offered neither free nor at heavily
subsidised rates. The advantages of NRSP credit are: (i) accessibility,
(ii) simple procedures and short time lag, and (iii) group collateral.
There are four major credit lines for which NRSP extends its loans:
agricultural inputs; livestock purchase and fattening; enterprise
development; and small infrastructure as individual enterprise. The
collateral requirements are the same for each of the credit lines; so
are the penalties of 1 percent per month in case of default. Each credit
line has a specified ceiling, a time limit for repayment, and a service
charge. The loan ceiling for a CO ranges between Rs 80,000 and Rs
90,000. The cumulative disbursement of credit until the end of April
1998 was Rs 457.47 million, of which nearly 70 percent went to
enterprise development and livestock in almost equal proportion; the
share of agricultural inputs was about 28 percent. 9744 COs (upto Feb.
2000) were established and 23969 households had enrolled in their
membership. The total number of loans was 1746. The average size of
loans per household was Rs 19085.90 but there is no way to determine the
average loan amount per loanee since there is no indication of whether
each loanee has received only one loan, or one loan has been distributed
among several loanees in the CO. The average recovery rate had stayed
around 97 percent in between 1993 through 2000 [HRD and NRSP (1998);
Pakistan (2000)].
NRSP's programme for women includes the formation of separate
COs for women where they cannot be partners with males in the so-called
mixed COs. Female COs increased from 143 in 1993 to 1292, and their
membership increased from 3,110 to 33759, by end April 1998. Their
savings increased quite significantly, from Rs 129,487 to Rs 715,041
over the same period; they accumulated Rs 844,523 in their savings. They
were also quite active in acquiring credit from NRSP. By the end of
1998, 62 female COs, comprising 269 loanees, had used nearly Rs 1.3
million in loans, mainly for poultry birds, livestock, and micro
enterprises (see Table 6a, 6b).
In Primary education, 150 community schools for 3097 girls and 1683
boys had been established in collaboration with the rural communities by
April 1998. Education committees and parents' groups have been
established to maintain and operate these schools. The school teachers
are holders of certificates of matriculation and intermediate education;
they are paid Rs 1000 to Rs 1500 per month, in which the contribution of
the community ranges from 38 to 63 percent. The community is expected to
increase its share as the benefits of education are now well recognised.
In addition, some 2179 infrastructure schemes were initiated and 57688
households availed the benefits of these schemes. Nearly 5.1 million
animals were vaccinated and 6499 million trees planted through NRSP in
collaboration with UNDP upto February 2000 [Pakistan (2000) and HRD
(1998)].
III. ROLE OF NGOs IN THE CONTEXT OF POVERTY LENDING
The poverty profile of Pakistan shows that a quarter to one-third
(30-50 million) of its population lives below the poverty line, if
poverty is defined narrowly--in terms of required food calories per
capita or minimum income of $1/day. While less than one-third of the
country's population is income-poor, almost one-half (70 million)
suffers from serious deprivation of opportunities. Nearly two-thirds of
total adult population (and as much as three-fourth of adult female
population) cannot read or write. Access to basic social services like
primary health care and safe drinking water is denied to nearly half of
the population [Banuri et al. (1997)].
The Pakistan Integrated Household Survey (PIHS), established that
in 1991 tenants constituted a sizeable group (14 percent) of rural
sample and had a poverty headcount of 44 percent; agricultural
labourers, (7 percent of rural sample), were even worse off with poverty
headcount of 56 percent. Among non-agricultural rural households, the
groups with the highest poverty headcount were casual workers (45
percent) and the self-employed (46 percent) with less than Rs 1000 in
assets, livestock etc. There is a general consensus that poverty in
Pakistan has increased in the 1990s. This rise in poverty is mainly
attributed to declining economic growth, persistence of severe
macro-economic imbalances, reduction in the flow of remittances from
overseas Pakistani workers, lack of social safety nets, and poor
governance [Pakistan (2000); Aziz (2000)].
According to the caloric-based poverty (headcount ratio), the
incidence of poverty declined sharply from 46.5 percent in 1969-70 to
17.3 percent in 1987-88. The rural and urban poverty also declined
sharply during the period. However, poverty increased significantly in
the 1990s, rising from 17.3 percent in 1987-88 to 22.4 percent in
1992-93 and further to 31 percent in 1996-97. The recent estimates
suggest that poverty has further increased to 32.6 percent in 1998-99.
In other words, the number of poor people that cannot meet their daily
nutritional requirements and fell below the poverty line, increased from
17.8 million in 1987-88 to 43.9 million in 1998-99. Similar trends are
observed in the case of rural and urban poverty. In fact, the incidence
of poverty in rural areas has remained higher than the urban areas since
1966-67 (see Table 7).
The role of NGOs in poverty reduction may remain ambiguous and
questionable if judged in the context of given poverty profile in
Pakistan. It may be that NGOs contributed to the well-being of their
participants at various places but their aggregate impact on poverty
reduction seems to remain negligible. Not-withstanding their
performance, over 8000 NGOs were identified in Pakistan in 1994.
Almost 50 percent fell in the categories of religious
organisations, professional and commercial associations, employee
unions, housing societies, clubs, clinics, and hospitals. Some 1998 NGOs
existed only on paper with no physical presence anywhere. The majority
of the 2547 remaining NGOs were welfare oriented rather than development
oriented. In Pakistan, the major focus of the development oriented NGOs
is on community development and provision of social services. For
financing of their activities the larger NGOs are still dependent on
foreign donors who find these NGOs a sound and cost-effective tool for
implementing community development projects and channel their grants
through them. However, donor dependency makes these NGOs vulnerable to
donor agendas. And the NGOs can not be a replacement for government, but
they instead may create good models of development in some areas of the
country [Banuri et al. (1997)and Zaidi (1999)].
A major disappointment of NGO development in Pakistan has been the
near total collapse of the co-operative movement, which had been the
most common form of NGO established for development purposes.
Co-operatives had been hailed as the solution to a whole host of problem
areas, including rural credit as an end to usurious money lenders, and
new channels for improved seeds, fertilisers and other inputs to flow
from governments. Instead, co-operatives emerged with a reputation for
corrupt leadership, inefficiency and political manipulation. This
failure of the co-operative movement led some NGOs to begin to question
what sorts of organisations were required to represent the poor and
whether, in fact, the poor needed special help to be able to build
organisations to represent their interests adequately. Whereas, in the
past, NGOs worked in collaboration with governments and elite groups to
promote economic development, now they began to target their work at the
poor, and in many cases, the 'poorest of the poor'. However,
during this reorientation, NGOs have remained content to pursue a common
purpose of 'working for the poor' and it matters little
whether this is in 'relief' mode or in pursuit of more durable
'development' solutions to chronic poverty [Mustafa (1992); N
arayan et al. (2000)].
There has been mixed record of NGOs performance in Pakistan. On the
positive side, many localised examples of NGOs are reported to have been
reaching groups of the poor with highly valued services. But there are
also stories of problems with NGO coverage, implementation and ultimate
effectiveness. Relations between NGOs and the government have at time,
marked by tension. It is alleged that true complementary relations
between the two are rare. Moreover, it is reported that only very few
NGOs in Pakistan are addressing underlying social inequalities by
actively supporting either poor people or social movements. However,
with some exceptions, NGOs are reported to have not moved forward to
address fundamental inequity issues that create the problems in the
first place [Mumtaz (1997)].
The great anomaly that one would encounter is the coexistence of
chronic poverty and plenty. At the national and regional levels there
exist more than sufficient food, know-how and resources to ensure that
every person could have access to basic needs essential to a reasonable
standard of living. However it is not the lack of means, but the failure
of existing socio-political system (governance forms and practices) that
deliver and sustain poverty, hunger and the abuse of human rights to so
many citizens. The crime of the rural poor is their powerlessness, their
vulnerability to abuse in situations dominated by unfair competition,
sectional self-interests, dishonesty, and unbridled corruption. The
persistence of poverty in Pakistan is a sign that existing system of
governance and delivery of the benefits of development are not
functioning as they ought to do if poverty and injustice are to be
overcome. In a very few eases this failure is directly the outcome of a
failure of the political will to do what is needed to eliminate poverty,
but in most cases the causes are more complex. In short failure of
resources to 'trickle down' and feed the estimated 50 million
living below the poverty line may be attributable to barriers of class
and caste that derive from a feudal tradition thousands of years old
[Narayan et al. (2000); Narayan et al. (1999); Banuri et al. (1997)].
IV. CONCLUSIONS AND LESSONS
A vast majority of the poor in Pakistan reside in rural areas, and
the severity of their poverty is greater than in the urban areas. Most
of the rural poor are in the households of small landholders,
cultivators (tenants), and the landless. Moreover, given the evidence on
accessibility to food, nutrition, health care, education, and employment
opportunities, there are glaring disparities between male and females in
rural Pakistan.
The experience of AKRSP, has shown that it can work well, provided
the rural poor effectively participate and the support organisation has
the institutional and technical capacity to provide assistance in the
development of the social organisation at the community or village
level. There is also some evidence that these activities and services
have contributed significantly, by creating trust and confidence, to the
growth and strength of the COs. These relationships, however, need
further analysis and study.
Indeed a major reason for the relative success of the Aga Khan
Rural Support Programme (AKRSP) in the Northern areas has been a
commitment to the long-term sustainability of the programme through
financial autonomy. NRSP in Pakistan has followed the dependency model
by which the rural people have been kept for so long at the mercy of a
paternalistic state. This, however, can be prevented only if NRSP enjoys
financial autonomy on a long-term basis as it is noticed in the case of
AKRSP.
While the international donor agencies channelled more of their
financial and technical assistance through the NGOs to stimulate the
process of 'democratisation' and increase the effectiveness of
aid, the governments in Pakistan have often remained ambiguous about
their relationships with NGOs, particularly with regard to establishment
and development of the rural community (grassroots organisations). It is
fair to say that, at least in Pakistan, the idea of increased
empowerment of the poor vulnerable in the society has not been given
unequivocal support by the entrenched political e1ite and the state
bureaucracy. Therefore, the NGOs as support organisations have to
establish their autonomy, credibility, and competence in this
environment to assist the poor in rural areas in their quest to acquire
greater control on their lives and improve their standards of living.
Besides the need for voluntary codes of conduct concerning the
behaviour of non-state actors within a community, NGOs in Pakistan need
to be provided positive incentives, alternative financing, and better
government access to improve their mobilisation of, and level of service
for, the poor. When power is shared between the government and the
informal institutions of civic governance, democracy and the rule of law
can be strengthened.
REFERENCES
AKRSP (1995) Thirteenth Annual Review: Pakistan: Gilgit AKRSP.
Asian Development Bank (ADP) (1999) Toward an ADB Micro-finance
Development Strategy. Proceedings of the Regional Workshop on
Micro-finance Development Strategy, held at Manila from 1-3 September,
Manila: Asian Development Bank.
Aziz, Sartaj (2000) Eradicating Rural Poverty-I. The DAWN. 06
April. Lahore.
Aziz, Sartaj (2000) Eradicating Rural Poverty-II: The Unfinished
Task. The DAWN. 07 April. Lahore.
Banuri, Tariq J., Shahrukh Raft Khan, and Moazam Mahmood (1997)
Just Development Beyond Adjustment with a Human Face. Karachi: Oxford
University Press.
Ghate P. et al. (1992) Informal Finance: Some Findings from Asia.
Hong Kong: Oxford University Press.
HDC (1999) Human Development in South Asia. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
HRD, and NRSP (1998) Orientation Training Workshop-OTW Intern XII,
September 22-03 October. Human Resource Developments and National Rural
Support Programme, Islamabad
Mumtaz, Khawar (1997) NGOs in Pakistan: An Overview. In Banuri et
al. Just Development: Beyond Adjustment with a Human Face. Karachi:
Oxford University Press.
Mustafa, K. (1992) The Institution of Cooperation, Credit and the
Process of Development in the Indian and Pakistan Punjabs. Unpublished
PhD Thesis. Glasgow: University of Glasgow, U.K.
Narayan, Deepa et al. (1999) Can Anyone Hear Us? Voices from 47
Countries. Vol. 1. World Bank: Poverty Group PREM.
Narayan, Deepa et al. (2000) Voices of the Poor: Crying for Change.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Pakistan, Government of(2000) Economic Survey-1999-2000. Islamabad:
Economic Adviser's Wing, Finance Division.
Potter, Ian, and Timothy Le Breton (1992) Credit Where Credit is
Due? The AKRSP and Enterprise Credit. Unpublished study.
Uphoff, N. T. (ed.) (1982) Rural Development and Local
Organisations in Asia. India: MacMillian.
World Bank (1995) The Aga Khan Rural Support Programme: A Third
Evaluation. World Bank Operations Evaluations Department Country
Specific Sectoral Review. World Bank, Washington, D.C. (Report No.
15157.)
World Bank (1996) The Aga Khan Rural Support Programme: Looking to
the Future. World Bank Operations Evaluations Department OEP-Precis.
World Bank, Washington, D. C. (Report No. 99111.)
Yaron, Jacob (1992) Successful Rural Finance Institutions. World
Bank. (World Bank Discussion Paper 150.)
Zaidi, Akbars S. (1999) Issues in Pakistan's Economy. Karachi:
Oxford University Press.
Comments
All kind of fashions come in waves. However, some fashions are more
favoured than other because of their convenience, affordability and
popular appeal. The authors have taken up three of the most favoured
offshoots of the trendy development economics of the contemporary
post-regulationist era, namely, NGOs, micro credit and poverty
alleviation. But in developing countries, unfortunately, the
convenience, affordability and popular appeal of these three phenomena
are not in their own right, rather they all owe their existence to the
marked shift in the priorities of Western donors in favour of lesser
government. It could be argued, rightly or wrongly, that NGOs is one of
the most controversial phenomenon, specifically in the developing
countries' context. The most obvious and equally alarming aspect of
NGOs in Pakistan is that too many of them have cropped up in the last
two decades. But numerical advantage alone is not sufficient to justify
institutions in the civil society, since proliferation is not a
substitute of performance. And opportunity cost, once it has been paid,
deprives the limited resources of their fundamental trait, namely, the
alternative employment in a better use. This contradiction is
specifically important in the context of the latest drive of the NGOs
i.e., micro finance programmes. Many would agree that the latter has
recently been given only the new clothing in that the 'liquidity
deficiency syndrome' in the human society dates back to the times
which reconcile the dogmatic and evolutionists' controversy over
the Genesis. The diagnosis and treatment, however, have varied both
inter-temporally and inter-spatially, ranging from usurious to
benevolent lending.
What do the authors offer for resolving the controversy and curing
the paranoia surrounding the NGOs and micro finance schemes
respectively? First of all, it is hard to determine the focus of this
study. The authors are constantly shifting their position in a circular
movement from offensive, anti-thesis, to defensive, prothesis, and then
back to offensive. Added to this is the problem of frequent intermittent
vacuums. Consequently, any effort, on the part of the reader, to filter
out the synthesis of the study is largely futile. The authors were
essentially required to provide a synthesis in a study supposedly
addressing an issue which, if not carefully managed, may become still
another unfortunate addition to the history's huge dustbin of
fiascos.
Secondly, the authors have not used a single coherent framework for
analysing the problem statement, the title of the paper. On the
contrary, their approach is essentially a compartmentalised one. The
different compartments, if viewed separately, contain useful material
and information, but together they do not provide a consistent strand of
argument.
Poverty is a phenomenon involving fair degree of arbitrariness both
in its concept and measurement. But poverty alleviation is universally
reckoned to be a noble cause. However, no cause can be translated into
plausible outcome without the assurance of the sustainability of
consistent efforts. The latter on the other hand, demands from any
developmental project the twin traits, namely, the financial viability
and operational transparency. In Pakistan, the micro credit schemes are
fraught with gray areas. Several institutional issues remain to be
resolved. The question of staffing and the direction of programme has
not been clearly spelt out anywhere. During the early phase of the
development of any programme, different visions of institutional
development occasionally clash. If the management turnover and the
struggle to define the programme strategy and mission take place in an
objective context, the efficiency is eventually ensured. Unfortunately,
given the hindsight, the objective context is difficult to be realised
in Pakistan. The authors have not taken into account these very
important aspects while discussing the micro credit programmes.
Further, the authors have adopted a route from specific to general
in that AKRSP and NRSP are their chosen terms of reference, but rather
than discussing the poverty alleviation in the micro areas of the
operation of these two programmes, they have attempted, however
unsuccessfully, to gauge the effect at a macro level. This mounts to
gross injustice, especially given the authors' opinion that
"the fundamental features of AKRSP's success, however, are
consistent with established international best practices and can be
adapted not only to surrounding countries, but indeed to most places in
the world".
One of the most interesting research question in any study on micro
credit is whether or not the Grameen Bank can be replicated in regions
that greatly differ from Bangladesh. Certainly, the implementation of a
group lending methodology must vary inter-spatially in many important
ways from the Grameen experience. The substance could have been added to
this paper by examining the appropriateness of a Grameen replication in
Pakistan and analysing three commonly touted advantages of group lending
over other financial methodologies: that poor women prefer it, that
repayment rates are better, and that costs are lower. The authors,
however, tell us that rural support programmes in Pakistan follows the
successful model of AKRSP. And major part of the paper is devoted to
explaining the procedural and other details of the latter and NRSP, but
the authors do not provide any comparison of the strengths of AKRSP and
the weaknesses of the 'NGOs' undertaking micro credit
programmes. AKRSP has been given a clean bill of health and, in authors
definition, NRSP is a government funded programme, the reader is totally
lost while being continuously served a "red herring", the
NGOs' failed micro credit programmes, indeed, the NGOs implicit
vision has been to set up the micro credit programmes with foreign
assistance. This approach is fair enough as long as there is a will to
gradually lessen the external influence in favour of local control. But
this does not appears to be on the agenda of the most of the NGOs in
Pakistan. As this transition has not evolved, the questions of staffing
and direction of the programmes have never surfaced. That said, it must
also be considered that most of the NGOs have chosen difficult economic
environments for the micro credit operations. In particular, many of the
programmes operate in villages where agriculture forms the heart of the
economy with non-farm activities including petty trade, services and
small businesses. Most of the areas are dependent on the vagaries of the
weather. Given these obstacles to credit inter-mediation, it is no
wonder that numerous attempts to provide these regions with credit in
the past have failed due to low repayment. (1) The combination of low
incomes and susceptibility to shocks makes any type of micro finance
particularly challenging in these areas. (2)
Further, there is a high possibility that adopting the
"credit-first strategies" as opposed to "savings-first
strategies" (3) have resulted in the inefficacy of many of the
micro credit programmes in Pakistan. In the credit-first approach,
outreach grows quickly due to the reliance on groups that can reach a
wide number of clients and due to the fact that donors' funds are
used rather than relying on the arduous process of mobilising local
savings. The inefficiency, and even malappropriation, in inevitably
created in the credit-first programmes since a greater incentive to
default occurs as the members know that they are defaulting on
donors' funds rather than the savings of their neighbours. However,
a good deal of empirical research in this area is needed. Indeed,
working with primary data is a better option for the kind of study which
the authors have attempted to conduct.
Finally, the study has made an important contribution in terms of
questioning the success of micro credit lending for poverty alleviation.
In Pakistan, it is high time that several issues relating to the micro
credit programmes are brought to the forefront since the experimental
programmes have now matured into financial institutions, the Khushkhali
Bank, for example. For achieving the poverty alleviation targets,
different group sizes, loan sizes, loan types and terms and conditions
need to be carefully appraised. It is suggested that the micro-finance
institutions adopt their loan instruments to the local context which
essentially requires an innovative research tradition. The most cost
effective way for establishing such a tradition is to encourage and
facilitate the university students for performing studies on various
aspects of micro credit lending.
Naheed Zia Khan Department of Economics, Fatima Jinnah Women
University, Rawalpindi.
(1) However, the failure is part due to politically motivated
credit pushes with no emphasis on repayment.
(2) These observation were made by the author during a field survey
of a micro credit programme of Khyber Bank in District Swabi, being
channelled by Swabi Women Welfare Society (SWSS).
(3) See, D. Graham, and J. D. Von Pischke "Factors and
Strategies that Lead to a Sustainable Supply of Financial Services for
the Rural Poor". IDB Workshop of Financial Services for the Rural
Poor, December.
Khalid Mustafa and Zulfiqar Gill are associated with the Faculty of
Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, University of Agriculture,
Faisalabad. Toseef Azid is Associate Professor in the Department of
Economics, Bahauddin Zakariya University, Multan.
Table 1
AKRSP Donor Support, 1982-94 (in US$ 000)
1982-83 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989
CIDA 415 658 706 888 1069 1530 1855
Netherlands 0 0 258 461 1183 1717 1834
Government
ODA 25 65 131 208 10 1878 1068
Aga Khan 1132 715 805 1046 816 464 450
Foundation
Norwegian Agency 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
for Int. Dev.
EU 0 0 0 0 137 135 0
Konrad Adenauer 0 0 90 246 0 72 88
Foundation
USAID 0 0 0 0 334 331 0
GTZ/BMZ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
World Bank 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Others 165 202 290 233 518 18 49
Total 1735 1640 2279 3081 4068 6144 5344
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 Total %
CIDA 694 867 1836 1331 2521 14367 27
Netherlands 709 1120 1489 1109 1352 11230 21
Government
ODA 1014 2769 717 1230 632 9749 19
Aga Khan 381 777 336 252 502 7674 15
Foundation
Norwegian Agency 0 590 538 548 739 2414 5
for Int. Dev.
EU 160 381 184 571 449 2018 4
Konrad Adenauer 156 451 183 143 344 1438 3
Foundation
USAID 0 0 0 0 0 1001 2
GTZ/BMZ 0 0 0 317 160 477 1
World Bank 0 0 0 31 85 116 0
Others 77 106 41 23 51 1771 3
Total 3190 7060 5324 5553 6835 52254 100
Source: World Bank: (1995); AKRSP (1995).
Table 2
Credit Disbursed by AKRSP (USS Millions)
1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989
From AKRSP to
VO/WOs, by Type
Short-term 0.08 0.19 0.30 0.48 0.71 1.24 0.84
Medium-term 0.03 0.23 0.27 0.78 0.72 0.74
Sub Total 0.08 0.22 0.53 0.75 1.49 1.96 1.58
From VOCP/WOCPs
to Members, by
District
Gilgit 0.14
Chitral 0.01
Baltistan 0.00
Astore
Sub Total 0.16
From AKRSP to MECP
Participants, by
District
Gilgit
Chitral
Baltistan
Astore
Sub Total
Total 0.08 0.22 0.53 0.75 1.49 1.96 1.74
Annual Increase 195% 136% 42% 97% 32% -11%
1990 1991 1992 1993
From AKRSP to
VO/WOs, by Type
Short-term 0.45 0.38 0.41 0.38
Medium-term 0.07 0.11 0.11 0.04
Sub Total 0.52 0.48 0.52 0.42
From VOCP/WOCPs
to Members, by
District
Gilgit 0.57 0.39 0.63 0.97
Chitral 0.04 0.15 0.15 0.20
Baltistan 0.02 0.05 0.11 0.12
Astore
Sub Total 0.64 0.60 0.89 1.29
From AKRSP to MECP
Participants, by
District
Gilgit 0.02 0.04
Chitral 0.00 0.02
Baltistan 0.01
Astore
Sub Total 0.03 0.07
Total 1.16 1.08 1.44 1.78
Annual Increase -33% -7% 34% 23%
Source: World Bank (1995); World Bank (1996), AKRSP (1995).
Table 3
Deposits by Members of VOs and WOs (AKRSP)
(US$ Millions)
1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991
VOs 0.06 0.43 0.66 0.95 1.78 2.58 2.96 3.47 3.75
WOs 0.02 0.04 0.08 0.12 0.19 0.27 0.37 0.48 0.57
Total 0.09 0.47 0.75 1.07 1.97 2.85 3.33 3.94 4.33
Annual 437% 60% 44% 84% 45% 17% 18% 10%
Increase
1992 1993
VOs 4.37 5.04
WOs 0.71 0.82
Total 5.07 5.86
Annual 17% 16%
Increase
Source: World Bank (1995); AKRSP (1995).
Table 4
AKRSP's Staff Strength by Categoty and by Gender, 1987-94
1987 1988 1989 1990 1991
Total Total Total Total Total
Management
Group 9 10 10 13 15
Senior
Professionals 21 16 25 50 49
Junior
Professionals 61 62 78 100 112
Support Staff 53 49 55 59 51
Divers/Auxiliaries 89 100 102 95 100
Total 223 237 270 317 327
1992 1993 1994
Total Women Total Women Total Women
Management
Group 13 1 12 1 13 1
Senior
Professionals 52 5 55 6 53 6
Junior
Professionals 105 11 104 13 126 17
Support Staff 57 15 56 21 77 20
Divers/Auxiliaries 116 0 127 0 172 0
Total 343 32 354 41 441 44
Source: World Bank (1995, 1996); AKRSP (1995).
Note: Women employees are only segregated here for the last three
years of data. However, the sources have data on women employees
from 1989.
Table 5
Progress of National Rural Support Programme (NRSP)--up to April, 1998
RWP KHB BDN
Community Male 638 529 686
Organisations Female 299 305 261
CO's Formed (No)
Mixed 295 21 48
Total 1232 855 995
Community Male 18147 11229 17748
Organisation (CO) female 8851 6205 6135
Membership (No.) Total 26998 17434 23883
Total Savings Savings 4290852 3857240 2334643
of Community Collateral 14616700 17900339 8805350
Organisations Total 18907552 18757579 11139993
(in Rs)
RWK TBT MDN
Community Male 354 191 271
Organisations Female 217 192 18
CO's Formed (No)
Mixed 58 24 --
Total 629 407 289
Community Male 9475 5254 9443
Organisation (CO) female 7499 4762 307
Membership (No.) Total 16974 10016 9750
Total Savings Savings 7750296 2509588 425249
of Community Collateral 8376860 1883000 237960
Organisations Total 16127156 4392588 663209
(in Rs)
D.G. Khan Vehari Total
Community Male 176 405 3250
Organisations Female -- -- 1292
CO's Formed (No)
Mixed -- -- 446
Total 176 405 4988
Community Male 2997 8543 82836
Organisation (CO) female -- 33759
Membership (No.) Total 2997 8543 116595
Total Savings Savings 1490008 1196716 23854592
of Community Collateral -- 7215610 56035819
Organisations Total 1490008 8412326 79890411
(in Rs)
Source: HRD and NRSP (1998).
Table 6(a) NRSP-Rural Credit and Enterprises Development
(upto April, 1998)
Credit Disbursed Rs 457479095
Households Covered 29480
COs Covered 9660
Male 1819
Female 537
Fixed 304
Table 6(b) Credit Disbursed for Different Activities
Activities Percentage
Agri. Inputs 27.1
Enterprise Development 30.1
Small, Individual Enterprise 3.8
Stock Development 39.0
Source: HRD and NRSP (1998).
Table 7 Trends in Poverty: Head Count (Poor Households as Percentage of
Population)
Year Total Rural Urban
1963-64 * 40.24 38.94 44.53
1966-67 44.50 45.62 40.96
1969-70 46.53 49.11 38.76
1979 30.68 32.51 25.94
1984-85 24.47 25.87 21.17
1987-88 17.32 18.32 14.99
1990-91 22.11 23.59 18.64
1992-93 22.40 23.35 15.50
1996-97 ** 31.00 32.00 27.00
1998-99 *** 32.60 34.80 25.90
Source: Pakistan (2000).
* Rashid Amjad and A. R. Kemal (1997) Macroeconomic Policies and their
Impact in Poverty
Alleviation in Pakistan. The Pakistan Development Review 36:1.
** Social Policy Development Centre, Karachi.
*** S. K. Qureshi and G. M. Arif (1999) Profile of Poverty in
Pakistan, 1998-99. Pakistan Institute of Development Economics,
Islamabad.