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Financial sector linkages    
        
"Financial sector linkages" can be an effective way to expand access to a broad range of financial services in rural as well as urban areas. Financial linkages are defined as mutually beneficial partnerships between formal and informal financial institutions that result in an expansion of financial services to new and/or existing clients. Within this context, expanding financial services does not only imply reaching more of the same clients; but also refers to providing financial services to those previously unserved segments of the population, or to broaden the variety or to improve the quality of financial services and products.

On one side, formal financial institutions have extensive infrastructures and systems, access to funds and opportunities for portfolio diversification permitting them to offer a wider range of services. However, they may be further removed from clients, particularly remote rural clients, which make obtaining adequate information and contract enforcement difficult. Informal institutions, on the other hand, usually operate close to rural clients, possess better information and enforcement mechanisms and are typically more flexible and innovative. However, they can be constrained in the type of services they offer since informal institutions lack resources and infrastructure to serve clients beyond a small geographic area.

In theory, linkages can help the different institutions overcome a weakness in what they can achieve on their own while helping to reduce costs and risks of reaching out to remote clients. In practice we are witnessing an evolution of financial linkages from the non-strategic, traditional bank-MFI relationships of wholesale finance to the more strategic nature of recent partnerships, such as commercial banks and insurers actively seeking non-formal actors (MFIs, SHGs SACCOs) to expand into new markets or MFIs strategically partnering with banks, firms, and governments offering fee-based services (money transfers, payments, salary disbursements, etc) as a way to market new clients while generating new revenue streams.

  
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TitleLinkages between CARE’s VS&LAs with Financial Institutions in Rwanda
Author/ EditorMaes, J.
Content Language(s)English
Type of Document Case study
Abstract / DescriptionCARE’s Village Savings and Loan (VS&L) methodology is a non-institutional savings-led alternative to credit-centered microfinance institutions. This model has proven especially successful and sustainable in poor, rural areas with bad infrastructure and low population density resulting in small loans and high transaction costs. Based on a belief that savings rather than lending services are more appropriate for and in higher demand by the rural poor, VS&L programs have emphasized savings mobilization through unregulated and usually informal groups that depend on member savings for their loan fund capital rather than external loans. One of the exceptions is the VS&L program by CARE Rwanda, in which Savings and Loan Associations (SLAs) are linked through federations (called Intergroupments, IGs) to external loan funds (provided by CARE) at the Banques Populaires. The main purpose of this case study is to critically document and analyze the SLA linkage to external credit in Rwanda. Taking into account the Rwandan context the case study describes the rationale for the linkage to external credit, lists strengths and weaknesses, and offers recommendations for VS&L and other savings-based financial service practitioners considering to replicate or adapt this model.

Keywords LINKAGES
Country RWANDA
Date of Publication/IssueAugust 2007
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Number of Pages46 pp.
  
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