CUs Worldwide Experience Remarkable Growth According To Recent Reports
Madison, WI-As the recently released 2003
Statistical Report indicates, the World Council
of Credit Unions, Inc. (WOCCU) and credit unions
around the world experienced remarkable growth
last year in all major areas. In 2002,
membership stood at approximately 118 million.
In 2003 it jumped to over 123 million, and five
new member countries were added for a total of
84. Total savings, capital and assets all
climbed more than 10%, with assets topping
US$758
billion at year-end. During the last 4 years
membership grew in the range of 3 – 5 % per
year,
whereas all the other growth indicators showed
growth worldwide of more than 10 % per year, or
double the membership growth. The number of
credit unions in the world is still growing
every
year, despite the steadily increasing number of
mergers in the more mature markets like the US
and Canada, where the actual number of credit
unions is decreasing by 3 respectively 6% per
year.
"Credit unions are demonstrating that they
are
very much alive," was World Council president
and
CEO Arthur Arnold's enthusiastic assessment
during the opening General Session at the 7th
International Credit Union Leadership Institute
in the Bahamas last week. And if these
statistics are not enough to convince any
skeptics, the success of two of WOCCU's key
programs, International Partnerships and the
International Remittance Network (IRnet) may.
IRnet saw several remarkable successes itself
in
2003, adding a second service provider,
Travelex,
and three new receiver countries. More
impressively, it nearly quadrupled both its
volume and the total monetary sum it used to
transfer, saving users US$4 million
worldwide. "Credit unions are doing what they
are supposed to do—benefiting members, enabling
millions of people to grow," said Arthur
Arnold.
More information about the many ways WOCCU
strived to accomplish this in 2003 can be found
in WOCCU's Statistical Report. The recently
published 2003 Annual Report, elaborates on the
growth of International Partnerships, IRnet and
other important development programs. Growth
is,
in fact, the main theme of all the articles
within the report.
As World Council leaders reflect on 2003's
successes, they look for ways to repeat those
successes through the end of 2004. According to
Arnold, the biggest barrier to maintaining high
levels of growth is corruption—and the best way
to fight corruption is through good governance.
Therefore this will be a priority to World
Council in coming years. "While providing
access
to affordable financial services is in every
credit union's mission statement," Arnold
explained, "We have to recognize that this can
only be achieved in a credible and sustainable
way, by adhering to good governance."
Currently, WOCCU is using the input of member
countries to formulate a system for Good
Governance based on Best Practices
Principles. "We have identified three levels
where good governance is necessary," explained
Arnold. "At the individual's level (for Board,
Committee and Staff members), at the internal
level for credit unions and externally, towards
the outside world."
At the individual good governance level:
integrity, competence and commitment (codes of
conduct and/or ethics, conflict of interest
statements, term limits, remuneration, and
speaking with "one" voice) go a long way in
doing
the job.
Internal good governance means adhering to
the
democratic process within the credit union (the
Annual General Meeting of the general assembly,
the Board election process, sharing information
with members), securing continuity (by doing 3 –
5 year strategic planning, including annual plan
& budgeting, succession planning for Board and
Management and disaster recovery planning), and
accountability (clear separation of functions
between the Board, Management and Staff).
And last but not least, external good
governance,
which includes creating transparency (full
disclosure) and compliance with the legislative
and regulatory framework in respective
countries.
WOCCU will publish these guidelines by the
end
of
2004. "There is a direct relationship in terms
of growth, between those credit unions who
practice good governance and those who don't.
Those who do, are the engines for growth, those
who don't are falling behind. We owe it to the
123 million credit union members in the world to
continue to go full speed ahead with good
governance," said Arnold. Click to view
Arnold's
presentation "CUs = the
Engines for
Growth."
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.
|