WOCCU Co-hosts E-Conference on Money Transfers with CGAP
From February 27 to March 3, 2006, the World
Council of Credit Unions (WOCCU), the Consultative
Group to Assist the Poor (CGAP) of the World Bank,
the Inter-American Development Bank
(IADB)/Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF) and the
International Fund for Agricultural Development
(IFAD) held an e-conference on money transfers for
microfinance institutions. The aim of this
virtual conference was to help microfinance
institutions make strategic and operational
decisions on international and domestic money
transfers and to generate input for the
forthcoming Money Transfer Operational Guide for
microfinance institutions (MFIs) developed by
CGAP.
Dave Grace, Senior Manager of Association Services
WOCCU, served as the facilitator for the
conference in which more than 200 people from over
20 countries subscribed to the discussion.
The key findings that emerged from the five-day
discussion are:
- Strong partnerships with money transfer
organizations (MTO)/banks are essential for an
effective money transfers service. The MTO/bank
partner should be well-researched in advance and
the partnership, once formed, needs to be
consistently nurtured.
- MTOs provided a clear list of what they seek
in money transfers partners, with large, physical
distribution networks topping the list. MFIs are
looking for MTO/bank partners with a network that
can capture volume, that require only a limited
up-front investment by the MFI, that consider the
cost of transactions for migrants, that has
reliable and secure operations, that offers a
beneficial fee sharing arrangement (possibly
including foreign exchange spread revenue), and
that agrees to a well-documented partnership
agreement that covers clear exit strategies and
timeliness of transaction settlement.
- A patient, soft-sell approach is critical to
gaining the trust of the money transfer client
prior to cross-selling additional MFI products.
Even with this approach, MFIs report that only
10-20% of money transfer recipients become clients
of other MFI products.
- Most participants felt that given the right
business model and time to grow sufficient volume,
money transfers can be a moderately profitable
business line.
For more information please visit the conference
website at:
http://www.dgroups.org/groups/worldbank/moneytransfers/
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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