Summary Country Report Belgium
Access to the micro-finance practice
The Belgian banking law offers several possibilities to
practice micro-finance. Basically there are no restrictions on the lending side as long as
it is practiced out of anything else but deposit(-like) funds. In other words, microcredit
is not restricted as such in Belgium and does not require a banking licence. There are
however also possibilities on the deposit side. First of all, public banking institutions,
such as the Post Office bank, are exempted from the banking supervision. Social pre-saving
schemes such as the pre-marital savings schemes are also exempted. It remains open
therefore either whether a partnership could be set up with a public bank, or whether the
pre-savings schemes could serve as a precedent to set up similar pre-saving mechanisms to
serve microcredit. Finally, a discretionary administrative practice adopted by the Banking
Commission allows any organisation to gather savings from up to 49 people without this
organisation having to be a bank.
Protection of the (micro-) borrower
The credit business as such is regulated on the other hand
by the Ministry of Economic affairs, which makes sure that (1) loan contracts are
transparent and present the full costs of a loan, and (2) which sets and periodically
adjusts the maximum interest rates that may be applied. Unfortunately this control only
applies to consumer loan contracts. So-called "professional loans" completely
fall outside these protective measures, which leaves micro-finance potentially open to
abusive behaviours.
Who does it and how?
Belgium has a large spectrum of financial organisations
practising social and micro-loans, non of which falls under any of the above supervising
authorities.
- The municipality owned Mont-de-Piété is the oldest
micro-lender on the European continent using the traditional pawn broking technique, which
is especially appreciated by borrowers for its extreme ease of access. Although not being
a microcredit organisation as understood for this study, it has in certain historical
periods shown that it could serve as a lender to very small businesses.
- The largest credit organisation for small businesses in
Belgium is the government funded Fonds de Participation, serving the unemployed and
small businesses at the lower end of bankability. Its major drawback has to do with its
public nature, which forbids it to compete with the private sector. It has thereby adopted
a complementarity approach to the mainstream banking sector which has helped it reduce its
default rates, yet with hindsight one can fear that, paradoxically, it largely contributes
to helping the banking sector to retract from the less profitable market segments.
- Those who are reduced to a do-it-yourself approach are
inclined to start up with the organisations of an association, of which there are
several in Belgium. The constitution costs and management constraints are extremely low.
The tax freeness makes it also an easy tool to receive donations and to work outside any
spending constraints. Most of these are very small, using the possibility to group a
number of less than 50 savers, as tolerated by the Banking Commission. This is fine for
organisations which are happy to remain small, but is a clear limitation for those
organisations that wish to grow, who also need stronger accounting and management
obligations to remain credible.
- A foundation status seems fine to attract larger
donations thanks to the tax deduction possibilities it offers. However its is not
institutionally designed to make it appropriately accountable to manage a credit system.
- The co-operative status is for those credit
organisation that mobilise a larger number of members. It may use the possibility to raise
up to 49 (deposit-like) loans. The rest is in the form of co-operative shares that are
fairly flexible In that they are retrievable and their total amount flexible.Its drawback
is that it benefits of no tax facility, which can be overcome by combining it with another
status (association or foundaton).
With the associative and cooperative status, the Belgian
legal context offers an interesting combination allowing to start up a micro-finance
organisation at small scale and low cost and to mainstream it as a co-operative (combined
with the association) with flexible share capital.
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