Microfinance - Small amounts, huge impact

By promoting microfinance, the SDC aims to offer cost-effective, comprehensive financial services geared specifically to the needs of poor sections of the population and microenterprises.

The SDC's focus

The SDC is committed to creating a financial sector that also takes account of the needs of poor households, women, smallholder farmers and microenterprises.  This is also known as the microfinance sector because it targets low-income sections of the population and microenterprises in particular. The SDC regards the development of financial services as an entrepreneurial challenge and aims to create cost-effective, sustainable services geared to clients' needs and able to respond flexibly to changing market conditions.

The key elements are:

  • The SDC supports a wide range of financial institutions that offer services for poor client groups.  Depending on the context, these may be formal financial institutions, such as banks that offer microfinance products in direct or indirect collaboration with self-help organisations, specialised institutions, such as co-operative societies, non-governmental organisations, village savings funds, post office banks or informal financial institutions, such as savings and loan groups or other civil organisations, etc.
  • The SDC promotes financial education for its target groups. This helps people learn more about financial products such as savings accounts and micro-insurance as well as basic skills in handling modest savings.

Background

When given the opportunity, poor sections of the population will eagerly save even the tiniest amounts. In poorer countries, the savings volume is often many times higher than the lending volume.  Moreover, loans are usually repaid reliably.  So it is all the more surprising that the overwhelming majority of the population in virtually all developing countries still have no access to adequate financial services.

By developing microfinance structures (specialised microfinance institutions, alliances between banks and non-governmental or self-help organisations, commercial banks with specific service structures for poor clients), even poor sections of the population can be integrated in the economic cycle.  As a fixed component of the financial sector, microfinance is aimed at economic actors who have no regular access to appropriate financial services via formal financial institutions.  The aim is to offer a broad, differentiated range of products and services for small and micro amounts of cash, including loans, savings services, insurances and cashless transactions.

Secure savings options are particularly important for households with small, irregular incomes and for women, in order to hedge against emergencies or set aside money for their children's education or other long-term investments. In addition to savings, access to credit facilitates their participation in economic life.  It enables them to capitalise on business opportunities and expand existing commercial activities.  Access to financial services can pave the way to a self-determined life of economic self-sufficiency.  This applies particularly to poor women who account for more than half of all microfinance clients around the world.

Current challenges

Facilitating access to secure financial services for poor sections of the population remains one of the key challenges for microfinance.  In addition to expanding financial and management know-how for clients and providers, the focus is on building and expanding sales channels and creating favourable framework conditions.  There is also a need to enhance efficiency and reduce costs in order to offer services cost-effectively and, thereby, sustainably.

Another challenge is to develop new products that meet the variety of needs of poor sections of the population.  A varied, secure range of savings products, long-term credit, insurance products and risk capital are just a few of the key ideas in this area.

Documents

Current projects

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Good Financial Governance (GFG)

01.05.2024 - 30.04.2027

The project contributes to strengthen Tanzania’s public financial system, a central element to cement its economic status. The 3rd phase aims at expanding the mobilization of domestic revenue and improving the government’s expenditure control. It shall strengthen interinstitutional mechanisms for tax data exchange, enhance the audit system, and improve public procurement. At policy level, it seeks to develop an evidence-based and gender responsive fiscal strategy for better public service delivery to benefit the population, especially the poor.


Integrated Water Resources Management in Kosovo (IWRM-K)

01.05.2024 - 30.04.2029

Switzerland assists water sector related governments, civil society and private sector stakeholders in Kosovo in the development/implementation of a national integrated and sustainable water resources management framework. Support activities combined with capacity development and awareness building will contribute to enhanced conservation, protection, quality and equitable distribution of water resources. Thus the project also contributes to good governance, reduced risks of internal and transboundary water-related conflicts, the mitigation of climate change impact as well to enhanced the health of the population.


Scaling Up Youth Employment in Agriculture Initiative

01.05.2024 - 30.04.2028

In Zambia and Zimbabwe, due to a mismatch between the skills they have and those in demand, youth cannot access or create economic opportunities and overlook those available. The project builds skills and matches youth with firms, markets and finance to create more and better (self)-employment in agri-food, renewable energy and emerging sectors, contributing to Swiss priorities on human and economic development and climate change. This is a contribution implemented by SNV.


Progressing towards Universal Health Coverage in Moldova

01.05.2024 - 30.06.2027

Switzerland supports Moldova’s efforts to achieve better health of the population, through ensuring universal access to affordable medical services of good quality. In its 2nd (exit) phase, the project will accompany the health authorities in advancing health financing and service delivery reforms, improving the efficiency and responsiveness of the healthcare system, promoting transparency and accountability in the health sector, and empowering service users and civil society organizations to oversee healthcare services, their quality and resource allocation.


Swiss Emergency Response Team (SERT)

16.04.2024 - 31.12.2027

Several Swiss organizations active in Mozambique together with the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) decided to join forces to be organized in a way, that we all together have fast and unbureaucratic access for doing the rapid needs assessment together and provide immediate response support where possible in Mozambique. Since 2021, the Swiss Emergency Response Team (SERT) organized several trainings in crisis management, rapid needs assessment and cash/voucher-based approaches for the staff members of the organizations. Doing the crisis management and rapid need assessment together creates synergy and complementarity among partners rather than each partner planning a response at the same place. A coordinated, locally led intervention will also yield the data necessary to justify an appeal to SDC’s emergency fund in time, should it be opportune.


Building Damage Assessment in Albania

01.04.2024 - 31.12.2027

The devastating earthquake in 2019 revealed that Albania has a weak policy and institutional framework and low public awareness on building damage assessment. The Swiss project will support Albania in strengthening its disaster risk management institutions at national and municipal level to provide sustainable and effective building damage assessment services, leading to safer living conditions and a more disaster resilient business environment.


Anti-corruption and Accountability

01.04.2024 - 31.12.2027

Building on the results achieved in the first phase, Switzerland will contribute to reduce corruption in Mozambique by (1) improving and strengthening legal institutions and the judicial framework (2) strengthening anticorruption institutions to effectively tackle corruption, economic crime and the recovery, management of stolen assets and (3) supporting civil society organisations at national and local level in the fight against corruption. 


Strengthened and Informative Migration Systems (SIMS) Phase II

01.04.2024 - 31.03.2029

Switzerland is interested in ensuring that international migration is regular, secure, respects human dignity and the rights of migrants. The project will institutionalise well tested awareness mechanisms on the perils of irregular migration and enhance further public and private capacities to deliver services to potential migrants. The intervention contributes to Switzerland’s dialogue on safe, orderly and regular migration at national and global levels.



AidData Chinese development finance profile

15.03.2024 - 30.06.2027

While China is becoming a main actor of international cooperation for development, it rarely discloses the specific financing terms and implementation details at project-level or transaction-level information about its foreign aid activities which makes it challenging for other actors of the international cooperation for development (including SDC) to understand their implications on recipient countries. The AidData project is building a dataset of country profiles summarizing Chinese’s aid with information form, function and impacts of their programs.


8th Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction, Geneva, June 2025

01.03.2024 - 31.12.2025

The Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction is the most important international conference to discuss progress in the implementation of the Sendai Framework for DRR. The eighth session of the Global Platform will be hosted by Switzerland in Geneva in June 2025. It will review advances in the realisation of the calls to action made in 2023 by the United Nations General Assembly on the midterm review of the Sendai Framework and will be key for the identification and support of measures to accelerate DRR implementation and improve coherence with the Agenda 2030 and the Paris Agreement.


Appui aux Programmes PASEC et PACTE de la CONFEMEN (Conférence des Ministres de l’Education des Etats et Gouvernements de la Francophonie)

01.03.2024 - 28.02.2028

En soutenant le Programme d’Analyse des Systèmes Educatifs (PASEC) et le Programme d’Appui à la Transformation de l’Education (PACTE) de la Conférence des Ministres de l’Education de la Francophonie (CONFEMEN), la Suisse contribue au renforcement de l’accès et de la qualité de l’éducation dans ses pays prioritaires en Afrique de l’Ouest. Des analyses approfondies des systèmes éducatifs sont réalisées, et les résultats permettent d’orienter les politiques éducatives pour une efficacité accrue.

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