Geographic Tracking
General Description:
Geographic targeting refers to the strategy of setting
up services in areas with high concentrations of poor
and vulnerable people and excluded groups. Often this
implies working in remote areas with low levels of
infrastructure which are not served by conventional financial
systems. Sometimes areas are targeted that are even avoided by
regular microfinance institutions. While there are potential costs
in setting up a remote branch, geographic targeting avoids the
time and expenses associated with a more thorough screening of
individual clients. It is based on a general understanding of
spatial differences in settlement patterns and the disparities
in existing distribution of infrastructure services. It has proven
to be a good method for generally ensuring that poorer and more
vulnerable people receive access to services.
Examples of Geographic Targeting:
Given that state investments and even development
interventions have often conventionally been concentrated in urban and
economically more affluent regions, some of the early MFIs saw a need
to work in rural areas in their mission to serve poor
people. In fact Grameen Bank went so far as to include in their statute
a provision that they would only provide services in rural areas. This
was done to ensure that there would be no yielding to the natural
pressure from within to work in urban centres with better-off clients
where staff life would be more comfortable and transactions costs would
be low. Many other MFIs working exclusively in rural areas have
similarly opted for geographic targeting. Prodem, for example, has
focused on working in rural areas once Banco Sol was formed.
There are other MFIs who have chosen to work in the
poorest regions of their country. Financiera Compartamos in Mexico
works in ten states and Mexico City. Four of these states are ranked
amongst the poorest six of the thirty-two states in
Mexico. Pro-Mujer's clientele are women in some of the poorest
neighborhoods of La Paz, Bolivia.
Some MFIs work in hard-to-reach,
difficult or remote areas. The Association Mennonite
de Développement Economique (MEDA) provides services
to poor people in the mountainous regions of Haiti. There is virtually
no infrastructure here. The unreliable rainfall, poor soil, and
continuing environmental degradation, force people to survive
on subsistence farming.
Social exclusion, or the exclusion of
groups because of their differences from the dominant
social group, can exacerbate poverty. Social exclusion
may be based on ethnicity, caste, language or even profession.
Many MFIs have extended the notion of geographic targeting to
a targeting of such excluded groups. AlSol, in Mexico, works in
the state of Chiapas with the indigenous people. Chiapas has been
the scene of endemic violence following the Zapatista uprising
and the subsequent military repression. The Women Economic Empowerment
Consort (WEEC) in Kenya has a special program to work with the
Maasai, who have traditionally been a pastoral community. IDF
had been the only MFI for many years to work with the tribal people
of the Chittagong Hill Tracts in Bangladesh, who were caught between
an armed insurrection and state-sponsored violence. Swayam Krishi
Sangam (SKS) works with the Dalits (the "untouchables"),
the lowest caste in India, in one of India's poorest states. Even
now, in rural areas, higher caste people will not eat together
or socialise with Dalits because the Dalits are considered impure.
Geographic targeting, including the targeting of
socially excluded groups, has allowed for services to
be provided in unserved areas and to unserved people.
While it does not provide strong identification of the
poorest within a region or population, it does address
a primary concern of microfinance: meeting the financial needs
of people who are not covered by conventional financial institutions.
For many institutions this is a vital first step in achieving
their mandate of serving the vulnerable and the very poor.
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