British Financial Secretary to the Treasury Supports WOCCU's PEARLS
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l-r: Mark Lyonette, chief executive of Association of British Credit Unions, Stephen Timms (MP) Financial Secretary to the Treasury, David Richardson - Senior Manager, World Council of Credit Unions; and Martin Mosley - Barclays, Consumer and Community Affairs Director pose for photo with PEARLS literature.
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Madison, WI—In early October, Association of
British Credit Unions (ABCUL) published the
results of their pilot project, which received
praise from the British Financial Secretary to
the Treasury, Stephen Timms, among others. The
primary aim of the project was to tackle the
problem of financial exclusion, a major issue
facing Britain right now. ABCUL has made
headway
on this aim in four key ways: by reducing
delinquency rates, growing assets and
membership,
decreasing operating expenses and improving net
capital.
Credit unions and banks are typically seen as
competitors, but as shown by the results of a
recent collaboration between the ABCUL and
Barclay's bank, their combined efforts can
produce excellent results. For the past two
years, ABCUL and Barclay's, with support from
the
World Council of Credit Unions, Inc. (WOCCU),
have been implementing WOCCU's financial
monitoring system, known as PEARLS, in nine
credit unions throughout the UK. David
Richardson, WOCCU technical development manager,
says of his experience, "For the past 2 1/2
years, I have worked closely with ABCUL to help
train British Credit Union leaders in the use
PEARLS so that they can have a greater impact in
providing financial services to their
communities. It has been most gratifying to see
the impact that PEARLS has had in the short time
it has been used. PEARLS is more than a set of
financial ratios. It is a monitoring system that
reinforces the credit union ideology and defines
with greater clarity, the difference that credit
unions can make in the financial
marketplace."
The results of the two-year pilot were so
impressive that Barclay's has agreed to fund the
implementation of PEARLS in 11 more British
credit unions, while ABCUL is working on
offering
PEARLS training and education to 100 additional
credit unions in the next three years, helping
40
of those credit unions to develop and implement
a
strong business plan, and developing an online
benchmarking tool so all credit unions may
compare their performance with that of their
peers.
"The results from PEARLS look very
promising,"
said Timms. "PEARLS empowers credit unions to
move towards sustainability and to become
stronger and more business like. Rigorous
credit
assessment makes it possible for members to get
access to credit before they have a saving
record, providing a much more realistic
alternative for many people to high interest
lenders. PEARLS also opens up the prospect of a
new and more diverse range of services being
made
available to members. I'm sure that further
progress will follow."
PEARLS has also influenced a number of the
participating credit unions to change their
lending policies, allowing new members capable
of
repaying loans more immediate access. In the
old
system, the members had to prove themselves a
regular saver for 13 weeks before they were
eligible for a loan. Now qualified individuals
may access a credit union's loan services when
they need it, while other measures prevent those
with an inability to repay the loan from
borrowing and thus further diminishing their
credit standing. "Credit unions are especially
helpful in providing affordable loans and "free,
face-to-face financial advice," says Timms. "The
credit union movement is now positioned to
develop and grow and to realize its full
potential in 21st century Britain."
El Consejo Mundial de Cooperativas de Ahorro y Crédito es la asociación gremial y agencia de desarrollo para el sistema internacional de cooperativas de ahorro y crédito. El Consejo Mundial promueve el crecimiento sustentable de las cooperativas de ahorro y crédito y otras cooperativas financieras en todo el mundo a fin de facultar a las personas para que mejoren su calidad de vida a través del acceso a servicios financieros asequibles y de alta calidad. El Consejo Mundial realiza esfuerzos de defensa activa en representación del sistema global de las cooperativas de ahorro y crédito ante organizaciones internacionales y trabaja con gobiernos nacionales para mejorar la legislación y la regulación. Sus programas de asistencia técnica introducen nuevas herramientas y tecnologías para fortalecer el desempeño financiero de las cooperativas de ahorro y crédito y profundizar su alcance comunitario.
El Consejo Mundial ha implementado 290 programas de asistencia técnica en 71 países. A nivel mundial, 51,000 cooperativas de ahorro y crédito en 100 países atienden a 196 millones de personas. Obtenga más información sobre el impacto global del Consejo Mundial en www.woccu.org.
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