WASHINGTON–During a breakout session at America’s Credit Unions’ GAC, attendees were given an update on how international advocacy and other efforts by credit unions have boosted inclusion.
Among those addressing the meeting were Erin O’Hern, WOCCU’s International Advocacy and Regulatory Counsel, who shared examples of how “advocacy work can be integral to expanding financial inclusion efforts.”
During her remarks O’Hern highlighted the work done through the USAID/WOCCU Credit for Agriculture Producers’ (CAP) Project in Ukraine to ensure credit unions in that country could serve small and medium enterprises (SMEs) through an expanded field of membership.
‘Look at the Success’
“To be able to go in and work with their regulators, work with their national government and say, ‘This is what other credit unions are doing in the global system, this is how other regulations work, look at the success that other credit unions have had at serving legal entities, at serving SMEs to be able to reach small farmers trying to get off the ground with needed capital and other financial services. Look at that success that could be done here’,” O’Hern said. “And I think there was just tremendous work done to make sure that those regulations were adjusted to be able to support financial inclusion throughout the country.”
O’Hern also shared examples of WOCCU’s previous work to expand financial inclusion to Venezuelan refugees and migrants in Colombia.
Not Just for Developing Countries
But credit unions aren’t only expanding financial inclusion in developing economies, according to one other presenter.
“The majority of our members would be deemed financially excluded. In the U.K., there’s lots of unemployment, there are barriers to housing and we are right in the heart of community,” Karen Bennett, CEO of Enterprise Credit Union in Liverpool, which she said is one of the three most economically deprived in the entire United Kingdom.
Bennett described one program at Enterprise Credit Union that requires every member to save at least £34 per week.
‘Lifetime Savings Account’
“We call it a lifetime savings account. And the whole idea behind it is that it is such a small amount of money that is coming in and being saved, but it’s building up over the years, so in five or ten years they have £1000,” Bennett said. “And for some of our members, they’ve never had that access before, so, it’s been very popular.”
‘Actually Have Wonderful Guidance’
Andrew Price, WOCCU's SVP-international advocacy and general counsel, said his team’s work in advocating for credit unions in front of the international standard setting bodies has resulted in them issuing guidance to national-level regulators that allows for greater financial inclusion and provides tools credit unions can consult to implement such programs.
“The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), they actually have some really wonderful guidance on financial inclusion, and particularly language in there that says regulation should never get in the way of someone having access to financial services,” Price told the breakout session. “And I urge you, if you’re doing financial inclusion, to look at that because there are a lot of examples of the ways you can reduce all of the regulatory requirements that you have to do at account opening, a lot of guidance on digital identity that includes proportionality, and ways that you can de-risk populations and be able to serve them by cutting down on the regulatory burden that gets in your way sometimes.”
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