Microfinance Institutions and Credit Unions in Albania : Regulatory, Supervisory and Market Development Issues
The objective of this report is to present an assessment of the current legal, regulatory, and supervisory framework in Albania for microfinance, as well as an assessment of institutions rendering microfinance services (MFIs), including the Savings...
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| Format: | Other Financial Sector Study | 
| Language: | English en_US  | 
| Published: | 
        
      Washington, DC    
    
      2013
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/06/16371691/albania-microfinance-institutions-credit-unions-albania-regulatory-supervisory-market-development-issues http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12899  | 
| Summary: | The objective of this report is to
            present an assessment of the current legal, regulatory, and
            supervisory framework in Albania for microfinance, as well
            as an assessment of institutions rendering microfinance
            services (MFIs), including the Savings and Credit
            Associations (SCAs) and credit unions (CUs), to identify
            future development priorities. Economic conditions have
            improved in Albania in recent years, but a significant
            percentage of the population is still considered below the
            poverty level. The report lists future development
            priorities for the SCAs and MFIs, emphasizing poverty
            reduction through microfinancing. Several MFIs, and one CU,
            expressed some desire to borrow from the World Bank. The
            report finds this promising, as long as it does not crowd
            out commercial sources that serve to integrate MFIs, CUs,
            and SCAs into the larger financial sector. The growth of
            SCAs might be enhanced by further consolidation of smaller
            SCAs into larger SCAs. Mergers based on joint objectives and
            bounds can expand the geographical coverage and clientele
            base, facilitate the increase of cash flows and access to
            capital, and achieve economies of scale in view of reducing
            fixed costs. Albania also wishes to obtain a banking license
            and focus exclusively on the microfinance market. A tax
            exemption enables CUs and SCAs to build up capital through
            retained earnings. Eliminating their tax exemption would
            either reduce their capital, or require that CUs replace the
            taxed earnings with other means of capitalization to
            maintain the same capital reserves. The report recommends
            that the Bank of Albania (BoA) should continue to work with
            the CUs on consolidating and strengthening the SCAs. | 
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