Microfinance Institution for Water & Sanitation
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Social
The Institution exclusively for water and sanitation targets rural Tamil Nadu, India to help poor communities
The poet W.H. Auden wrote that, ‘thousands have lived without love, no one without water.' One canadd that if water is to survive, clean water is to live longer, as it marks the difference between hygenic and unhealthy spaces.Its simplicity, however, is constrained by the increasing levels of sophistication that more crowded spaces and modern households require for the systems of water supply. This can be a problem especially in rural areas due to lackmof sufficient information and financial capacity. Paul Sathianathan, aware ofthis problem, started Guardian, a not-for-profit microfinance institution that provides loans to create infrastructure for household water connections and toilet constructions.
After working for 20 years with the government and five years with several NGOs, he gathered substantial knowledge in the microfinance sector.Dissatisfied with the existing microfinance system in India, he started Guardian. "In the Indian scenario, several micro credit institutions promote activities such as petty shops, vegetable vending, handicrafts works, purchase of milch animals, agricultural activities, personal consumptions etc.
However, their rate of interest is so high that they are not affordable to the living poor." The result, he says, is that "the people who transact. with these institutions become poorer." In fact, entire communities have had to move far from their homelands due to the heavy debts incurred because of accumulated interests. "Though after the Andhra Pradesh crisis in the microfinance sector, the government of India has taken measures like fixing interest caps on loans, avoiding multiple borrowings through credit bureau reports, etc," he says.
Paul believes that the problem does not lie in microfinance itself, but in the way it has been conceived and implemented. "So far, no Indian institution has come forward for micro lending operations to sponsor drinking water connections and house hold toilets for the poor. Most of them just wanted to make a profit and this kind of credit is not practical because loans are not easy to recover."
Recently, some MFIs have included water and sanitation loans as part of. business. However, Guardian is the only MFI providing water and sanitation loans exclusively and - Paul says - it is the first of its kind in the world. The two- member senior management team at Guardian comprises Paul Sathianathan and M. Senthilkumar and is supported by a governance team of six. They operate in 22 blocks in six districts of Tamil Nadu (Trichy, Pudukottai, Namakkal, Peramblaur, Karur and Salem) and each branch has one manager, one computer operator and five credit officers.
Guardian's loan products include six activities at the household level: new toilet construction, new water connection, renovation of existing water and toilet facilities, installation of water purifiers, rain water harvesting structures and bio gas plants. Each of them has a different loan scheme which varies from Rs 5000 to Rs 14, 000, with a repaying period of up to 18 months.
"All the above loan products attract a diminishing interest rate of 21 per cent per annum and collect one per cent of loan amount as processing fees on loan documents," says Paul. Being a pioneer in this type of micro finance, Guardian is facing several challenges. "Financial institutions are still reluctant to extend support for loan funds under the priority sector lending. Micro finance networks in India have strived hard through representation to regulatory authorities like Reserve Bank of India, NABARD etc," explains Paul.
Source: Social Story
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Taxonomy
- Water Supply
- Sanitation & Hygiene
- Governance & Planning