Paper

Financing Small Water Supply and Sanitation Service Providers - Exploring the Microfinance Option in Sub-Saharan Africa

Can microfinance be used to finance water and sanitation services?

Recognizing the vital role of the small service providers (SSPs) in the provision of water and sanitation services in Sub-Saharan Africa, this paper discusses the possible role of microfinance in financing small water supply and sanitation (WSS) service providers.

The paper explores three central questions:

  • How does the level of development of the microfinance sector in Sub-Saharan Africa affect the potential for financing small WSS service providers?
  • What is the nature of latent demand for finance from small WSS service providers?
  • What role can governments and development partners play?

Further, the paper lists the key aspects to be addressed by governments and development partners:

  • Ensure financing space through policy and programs;
  • Provide appropriate regulatory framework and partnerships with SSPs;
  • Enable appropriate regulatory framework for microfinance;
  • Support communities and microfinance providers for articulating demand for finance;
  • Encourage action research through pilots;
  • Strengthen knowledge management.

The authors observe that there is:

  • Existence of a latent demand for finance among the SSPs in the WSS sector;
  • Requirement of technical support and demand promotion;
  • Need for appropriate changes in government policy and regulatory environments;
  • Need to extend the outreach and sustainability of the microfinance sector in Africa to enable its support for financial services and credit;
  • Necessity to support appropriate partnerships between the WSS and microfinance sectors in order to reduce or overcome policy and regulatory risks.

About this Publication

By Mehta, M., Virjee, K.
Published