Financial inclusion: Comparing India and Pakistan.

AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
486722-manwithcouin-1356879611-470-640x480.jpg

http://tribune.com.pk/story/486722/financial-inclusion-an-unheard-of-phenomenon-in-pakistan/


In a country where many borrowers without access to formal financial institutions are forced to offset decades-old loans by marrying their female family members off to predatory private lenders, the importance of financial inclusion cannot be overemphasised.



After all, Pakistan ranks embarrassingly low not just internationally, but also regionally, as far as access to formal sources of finance is concerned, according to the World Banks Financial Inclusion Database 2012.

It estimates that only 10.3% Pakistani adults maintain an account at a formal financial institution compared to the global average of 50.5%. The corresponding figure for all South Asian economies, which include Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Sri Lanka, is 33%.
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It gets worse in the case of Pakistans female adults: a mere 3% of them have an account at a formal financial institution whereas the comparable figure for India, for example, is 26.5%.

Surprisingly, the problem of low exposure to formal sources of finance is not restricted to marginalised population groups like women or the poor. The World Bank estimates that only 14.3% of Pakistanis in the third, fourth and fifth quintiles of income i.e. the relatively well-off segment of the national population maintain a formal bank account. The comparable figure for India is 44.4%, according to the Financial Inclusion Database 2012.

The explanation for the fact that a majority of Pakistanis is still without a formal bank account can be found in the composition of our gross domestic product (GDP). A large number of people belonging to the agriculture sector continue to stay away from formal financial institutions, said Emerging Economics Managing Director Muzammil Aslam while speaking to The Express Tribune.

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Although the agriculture sector accounts for 21% of GDP, the Pakistan Economic Survey 2011-12 says it generates 45% employment in the country.

Aslam says people working in many sub-sectors within the GDPs services sector which employs 34.9% of the labour force as per the CIAs World Factbook are also able to avoid taxes by choosing to stay away from formal modes of financing. For example, the largest sub-sector of the services sector transport, storage and communication is crammed with tax evaders.

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Most drivers in the transportation sector receive their salaries in cash from vehicle owners. Nobody tells them that they should open bank accounts to be part of the formal financial system, Aslam says.

The World Bank estimates that only 4.6% of Pakistanis saved any money for emergencies in the past one year compared to 18% Indians, who set aside some amount for the same reason last year. On the flip side, 17.1% Pakistanis reported that they had an outstanding loan for health or emergencies as opposed to 14.2% Indians who had an outstanding loan for the same reasons.
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The comparison suggests that while Indians tend to save more and borrow less when an emergency strikes, Pakistanis save little and borrow heavily for unforeseen events.

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Indians have done major tax reforms in the last decade or so, which has improved their access to finance, Aslam said. Unlike expatriate Pakistanis, a non-resident Indian cannot even think about sending home remittances through informal channels, which has eventually resulted in connecting more people to the banking sector, he added.

Published in The Express Tribune, December 31[SUP]st[/SUP], 2012.

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UKPakistani

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
@AsifAmeer

Yar when are you going to stop adding to my depression woes and worries :P

PS off topic

but I was reading about something callled "peer to peer" lending stuff

as an alternate to banks and other lending financial institutions ?

any ideas thoughts or views on something like that working in a place like Pak ?
 
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AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
I too read about this peer to peer lending stuff like about a year ago. then i lost link to it. Can you share with me the service ur talking about?

About the article I posted here.. I got kinda mixed feeling on it... as its actually not a bad news. This means Pakistan is not a financialized economy.. which is a good thing. Did that help reducing your depression?
@AsifAmeer


Yar when are you going to stop adding to my depression woes and worries :P

PS off topic

but I was reading about something callled "peer to peer" lending stuff

as an alternate to banks and other lending financial institutions ?

any ideas thoughts or views on something like that working in a place like Pak ?
 

UKPakistani

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
I too read about this peer to peer lending stuff like about a year ago. then i lost link to it. Can you share with me the service ur talking about?

About the article I posted here.. I got kinda mixed feeling on it... as its actually not a bad news. This means Pakistan is not a financialized economy.. which is a good thing. Did that help reducing your depression?

only a little but then i have much to be depressed about in Pak lol

link here

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18370777
 

AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
Nahi this is different than what i had read. I too bumped into another site where ppl were borrowing and lending per their credit scores. Thats just the status quo system. The one I was talking about had some sort of social media trust circles issuing their own money.. and then producing services to their own circles and demanding their issued money back.. It was some wicked idea. But i dont remember what site it was.

only a little but then i have much to be depressed about in Pak lol

link here

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18370777
 

Vitamin_C

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Nahi this is different than what i had read. I too bumped into another site where ppl were borrowing and lending per their credit scores. Thats just the status quo system. The one I was talking about had some sort of social media trust circles issuing their own money.. and then producing services to their own circles and demanding their issued money back.. It was some wicked idea. But i dont remember what site it was.

It is so easy to fake vouches and credit scores. My cousin scammed thousands of $$$ on websites which used trust and points to trade its not a fool proof idea.
 

lurker

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
I too read about this peer to peer lending stuff like about a year ago. then i lost link to it. Can you share with me the service ur talking about?
You guys are probably talking about prosper.com . A few years ago I thought about giving it a go. Its basically personal lending. Basically you lend small amounts of money to multiple people at a fixed interest rate of return. The chances of default are high but with a broad enough portfolio you can still turn in a good profit.

http://www.prosper.com/
 

sabir1

Senator (1k+ posts)
i think this situation will change by drastically as we have entered into branch less banking . in near future people will have even lesser formal bank accounts and more of mobile bank accounts
 

AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
I have learnt 1 thing in life. When the sh!t hits the fan, all correlations go to 1. And everyone cant be hedged in the game. These two points are basically 2 sides of the same coin.
You guys are probably talking about prosper.com . A few years ago I thought about giving it a go. Its basically personal lending. Basically you lend small amounts of money to multiple people at a fixed interest rate of return. The chances of default are high but with a [HI]broad enough portfolio you can still turn in a good profit[/HI].

http://www.prosper.com/
 

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