By Daryl Collins , Jonathan Morduch, Stuart Rutherford and Orlanda Ruthven

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By Daryl Collins , Jonathan Morduch, Stuart Rutherford and Orlanda Ruthven. I. The Problem. $2…. 40% of the world live on $2 a day or less. If you earn $2 a day it’s easy to assume. You live hand-to-mouth You can’t plan for the future You can’t save - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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By Daryl Collins, Jonathan Morduch, Stuart Rutherford and Orlanda Ruthven

I. The Problem

$2…

40% of the world live on $2 a day or less

You live hand-to-mouth

You can’t plan for the future

You can’t save

You can’t have much of a financial life

If you earn $2 a day it’s easy to assume...

II. Financial Diaries

What are the Financial Diaries?

Household surveys that track penny by penny how poor households in India, Bangladesh and South Africa manage their money.

Why Financial Diaries?

Large, one-time surveys

Financial diaries

Small-scale anthropological

studies

Mixed-research methodology

Captures the complexity of people’s lives

Systematic in data collection

Improved data quality

(Expenditures + other outflows)

Sources of funds = Uses of funds

(Income + other financial inflows)

Margin of error

Improved data quality over time

One-time interviews miss a lot.

-400%

-350%

-300%

-250%

-200%

-150%

-100%

-50%

0%

50%

100%

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

After about 6 interviews, the margin of

error of data collection decreases to an average of 6%.

Number of interviews

III. Lessons

1. The poor are active money managers

Respondents patched together a wide array of services and devices:

• Informal • Semi-formal • Formal

Bangladesh example• On average the Bangladeshi households push or pull through financial services and devices each year a sum of money ($839) =2/3 of their annual cash income.

• No household used less than 4 financial devices.

• 1/3 of them used more than 10.

Microfinance savings account

Saving with a moneyguard

Home savings

Life insurance

Remittance to home village

Loans to others

Cash in hand

Microfinance loan

Interest free loan from neighbor

Wage advance

Savings held for neighbors

Shopkeeper credit

Rent arrears

The poor face a “triple whammy”

2. Being poor isn’t just about low incomes

Low incomes

Irregular and unpredictable incomes

Lack of appropriate

financial tools

$2 a day is just an average……Seasonal variations in monthly income

$0

$20

$40

$60

$80

$100

$120

$140

$160

$180

$200

Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May June July Aug

Traders

Small Farmers

Pumza, South Africa

• She supports herself and four children as a street food vendor, and with a small government child support grant

• Her average monthly income is $120• On slow days, she doesn’t earn enough cash to buy fresh

stock for the next day • During lean times she borrows from a moneylender at a

monthly interest rate of 30% or uses her savings.

Pumza’s greatest challenge is her irregular income.

Pumza, South Africa

Net cash flows, aggregated weekly, US$

The challenge of living on $2 a day is that $2 a day is just an average

-$10

$0

$10

$20

$30

$40

$50

3/20

/200

4

4/2/

2004

4/16

/200

4

4/30

/200

4

5/15

/200

4

5/29

/200

4

6/11

/200

4

6/24

/200

4

7/9/

2004

7/30

/200

4

8/13

/200

4

8/27

/200

4

9/10

/200

4

9/25

/200

4

10/9

/200

4

10/2

2/20

04

11/6

/200

4

11/1

9/20

04

3. The poor can and do save

• Saving is often in small amounts week after week

• Formal sector devices often lack:

› Convenience› Flexibility

• But informal savings mechanisms can be:

› Inflexible› Unreliable

How Nomsa’s savings club works

-20

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

Every month each member contributes

$9

On the final month, the members split

the accumulated funds and each receive

$99

US$ converted from South African rand at $=6.5 rand, market rate

Cape Town, South Africa

Fire and loss of property affected 19% of Diary households in Bangladesh

Illness affected 50% of Diary households in Bangladesh and 42% of Diary households in India

Funerals affected 81% of households in South Africa.

4. More risks, but fewer financial tools

Responses to crisis

Need to pull together adequate financing at the right moment.

Sell assets Exhaust savings

Take on high-interest loans

Thembi’s Brother’s Funeral

US$ converted from South African rand at $=6.5 rand, market rate

Sources of funds

Payout from burial society

$154 Borrow from aunt’s burial society (no interest)

154

Contribution from relative

231 Borrow from cousin’s savings club (30%/month)

92

Contribution from relative

154 Borrow from cousin (no interest)

108

Contribution from relative

154 Thembi’s grant money 92

Rental of tent by relative

91 Brother’s grant money 49

Rental of cooking pots by relative

35

Purchase of sheep by relatives

100

Kenneth, a shackbuilder in Cape TownHousehold income: $2.3 per person per day

Kenneth’s Financial Portfolio

Insurance-Funeral

insurance

Savings-Savings club-Bank account

-Saving in house

Credit given-Credit to customers-Loan to neighbor

Credit taken-Bank loan

-Store credit

5. Small businesses: Not just capital loans

• Not all small businesses can use capital loans to expand their businesses

• But they do need flexible credit and savings to bridge cash flow.

• One of the most challenging aspects of small business is managing the debtors book

VI. Conclusions

Better portfolios

Poor households maintain financial lives because they are poor, not in spite of it.

Hidden tragedy of poverty: the poor lack tools to make the most of what they have.

Next steps: scale-up ideas that are working. Open up to ideas and priorities that the poor have already made central in their lives.

www.portfoliosofthepoor.com

The Ford Foundation

The Financial Access Initiative

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

FinMark Trust

DFID

MicroFinance Regulatory Council

Photos by Robin Saidman, www.vitaledgeaid.org

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