Abstract:
This thesis is about comparative analysis of microfinance institutions of three major countries of
South Asia which are India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. At present microfinance is very common
in these countries and many microfinance institutions are operating in each country; maximum
number of microfinance borrowers i.e. 58.6 million and average loan balance, which is USD
144, are in South Asia and so it is the most sensitive part of the world in terms of poverty. The
comparison of the microfinance institutions is done on the basis of philosophies of these
institutions, the working methodologies and models of microfinance these MFIs have adopted
and the performance of these institutions. Performance of microfinance institutions is measured
using four parameters, which are sustainability/profitability, outreach, operational and financial
efficiency and compliance. Comparison is done first of the three countries and then of the
microfinance institutions of each type, categorized as NGOs, NBFIs, Cooperatives and Credit
Unions, Banks and others. Data is taken from the Microfinance Information Exchange for a
period of 11 years from 161 MFIs, 99 MFIs of India, 25 MFIs of Pakistan, and 37 MFIs of
Bangladesh. Assets, Average deposit balance per depositor, Average deposit balance per
depositor / GNI per capita, Average loan balance per borrower, Average loan balance per
borrower / GNI per capita, Borrowers per staff member, Borrowings, Capital/asset ratio, Cost per
borrower, Debt to equity ratio, Depositors per staff member, Deposits, Diamonds, Equity,
Financial expense/ assets, Financial revenue/ assets, Gross Loan Portfolio, Number of active
borrowers, Number of depositors, Operating expense/ assets, Operating expense/ loan portfolio,
Personnel, Portfolio at risk greater than 30 days, Provision for loan impairment/ assets, Return on
assets, Return on equity, Women borrowers, Write-off ratio, and Yield on gross portfolio
(nominal) are used as the variables of various areas of performance. The endogenous variables
are Return on Assets and Return on Equity for sustainability, number of borrowers per staff
member for operational efficiency, cost per borrower for financial efficiency, and number of
active borrowers for outreach. Panel data analysis is done after checking the assumptions.
Normality of data is checked using Jarque-bera test and linearity using normal probability plot.
Variance Information Factors of variables are seen to find out multicoliearity and scattered
diagram for detecting Heteroskedasticity. Hausman Test is applied to find out the suitability of
Fixed or Random Effect Model. In addition to this descriptive analysis of the variables is also
done. This study concludes that there are many models of microfinance prevalent in the three
A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF MFIs OF SOUTH ASIA 13
countries. Due to requirements of fund providers and also to pay interest to the depositors, in
case of MFIs where savings are also a part of microfinance, sustainability is the main issue and
Institutionists’ Approach is more commonly followed. Very few MFIs follow Welfarists’
Approach due to high financial operational costs of MFIs. Very few common factors were found
in relevant Fixed or Random Effect models in each area of analysis, both in the grouping of
countries and also the institutions type.