会议专题

Role of Turkish Commercial Banks in Developing Sustainable Microfinance Program

One of the most popular economic efforts globally is to enable the poor people to get access to financial resources. The current Turkish efforts in this direction are limited to selected government agencies providing microfinance to the poor people on a subsidized basis. For obvious reasons such a practice does not stand a chance of ever become self-sustaining. The alternative involves seeking ways of persuading the private commercial banking industry, with all its competitive capacity and dynamism, to launch microfinance (MF) programs with a variety of different financial products as part of their corporate social responsibility (CSR). This paper first provides a brief overview of MF activities in Turkey, and after analyzing commercial banking industry data, it seeks to encourage the banking industry to seriously consider embracing MF for the poor of the country. This can easily be done by allocating a tiny fraction of their current resources towards MF as part of their corporate social responsibility, and making effective use of the industrys growing network of branches throughout the country. The study attempts to develop a systematic set of criteria to not only convince commercial banks about the MF potential, but also to persuade them to seriously try making MF products profitable and self-sustaining, while continuing to help ameliorate poverty. The recommended guidelines and criteria include considerations such as: maturity indifference, use of branch networks, mechanics of allocating funds from existing resources, levels of microcredit per customer, microcredit banking versus collateralized banking, targeting the economically lowest twenty percent of the population, etc. As a starting point for each commercial bank to initiate this CSR project, the study proposes a mandated requirement for every bank to allocate a certain percentage of its previous years average profits per towards MF. Information is also provided on the successful trend among MF Institutions globally towards becoming selfsustaining, and gradually, even profitable. Brazils experiences in this direction are tapped into to suggest a specific rule-of-thumb formula for the banking industrys use to penetrate the vast untapped Turkish MF market. This study might prove to be an igniting point for jump starting a national effort towards assisting the poor through MF initiatives.

microfinance microcredit financial access commercial banks sustainability

Sudi Apak Jamaluddin Husain Erol Eren Ali Faruk Acikgoz

Beykent University, Turkey Purdue University Calumet, USA Namik Kemal University, Turkey

国际会议

The Thirteenth West Lake International Conference on Small & Medium Business(第十三届西湖国际中小企业研讨会 WLICSMB2011)

杭州

英文

528-539

2011-10-15(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)