The Performance of Banks in Rural Financial Markets

H. Moll
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

In the 1960s and 1970s national policymakers charged many rural banks with the provision of cheap credit to small farmers, small fishermen, or broadly speaking, rural households with small-scale enterprises. The performance of these institutions and the programs, projects and schemes they supported, however, remained below expectations. A new thinking about rural finance and its role in development, based on the concept of the Rural Financial Market (RFM), clearly demonstrated the shortcomings of the cheap credit policy. It enabled a more balanced understanding of the roles of rural banks, informal intermediaries and their (potential) clients in the supply of and demand for financial services (Adams 1983; Donald 1976; Von Pischke 1981). The new thinking also resulted in a growing recognition that governments should refrain from direct participation in banking and concentrate on policies that establish and maintain confidence in financial institutions. Such a new role of government in finance is a pre-condition for the provision of sustainable financial services by banks. Of course, this is not the only issue. Various studies have explored other factors that strongly affect the provision of rural banking services (Binswanger and Rozenzweig 1986; Schmidt and Kropp 1987; Von Pischke 1991). This paper focuses on the costs of financial intermediation and its relation to the scale of operation. The calculation and monitoring of costs is of central importance when rural banks2 pursue the socially desirable objective of providing financial services to new clients. Emphasis on reaching new clients without due attention to costs, and the control of costs in particular, leads invariably to operating losses which sooner or later result in a reduction or termination of services provided. From a long-term perspective, the objective to reach new clients should thus necessarily be linked with attention to costs, or in broader terms: with the objective to operate on a financially viable basis. Rural banks trying to achieve these two objectives simultaneously are faced with a host of questions regarding the demand for various types of financial services by their new clients, and their own organizational, operational and financial capabilities to meet this demand. Answering these questions requires analysis, followed by experiments to explore the feasibility of new organizational approaches and new methods of operation. The discussion of lending costs should therefore be part of evaluation of existing banking services and of planned experiments to widen to scope of services.
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银行在农村金融市场的表现
在20世纪60年代和70年代,国家政策制定者要求许多农村银行向小农户、小渔民,或者广义上讲,向拥有小型企业的农村家庭提供廉价信贷。然而,这些机构及其支持的计划、项目和计划的绩效仍低于预期。基于农村金融市场(RFM)的概念,对农村金融及其在发展中的作用进行了新的思考,清晰地揭示了廉价信贷政策的缺陷。它使人们能够更加平衡地理解农村银行、非正式中介机构及其(潜在)客户在金融服务供求方面的作用(Adams 1983;唐纳德1976;Von Pischke 1981)。这种新思维还使人们越来越认识到,政府应避免直接参与银行业,而应集中精力制定政策,建立和维持对金融机构的信心。政府在金融领域的这种新角色是银行提供可持续金融服务的先决条件。当然,这不是唯一的问题。各种研究探索了其他强烈影响农村银行服务提供的因素(Binswanger和Rozenzweig 1986;Schmidt and Kropp 1987;Von Pischke 1991)。本文主要研究金融中介成本及其与经营规模的关系。当农村银行追求向新客户提供金融服务这一社会期望的目标时,成本的计算和监控是至关重要的。强调获得新客户而不适当注意成本,特别是成本控制,必然导致经营亏损,迟早导致所提供服务的减少或终止。因此,从长期的角度来看,接触新客户的目标必须与对成本的注意联系起来,或者从更广泛的角度来说,与在财政上可行的基础上运作的目标联系起来。试图同时实现这两个目标的农村银行面临着新客户对各种金融服务的需求,以及他们自己的组织、运营和财务能力来满足这一需求的一系列问题。回答这些问题需要分析,然后通过实验来探索新的组织方式和新的操作方法的可行性。因此,对贷款成本的讨论应成为评价现有银行服务和扩大服务范围的计划试验的一部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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