Microfinancing
Microfinance is a type of banking service provided to those who have difficulty in accessing formal financial services. It is targeted at the low-income and unemployed fraction of the population. The institutions supporting microfinance offer services such as lending, setting up bank accounts and providing micro-insurance products. In developing countries such as India, financial services through formal channels do not meet the demands of the rural poor, so microfinance can help small-scale businesses flourish by providing greater financial stability.
Eligibility and Documents Required
Our streamlined process ensures that those in need can access funds quickly with minimal documentation. Contact Omozing to get the customized list of documents based on your business profile.
Objectives of Microfinance
Socio-Economic Development
To promote development among unbanked or under-banked families.
Strengthen SHGs
To reinforce Self-Help Groups (SHGs) for national economic growth.
Empower Startups
To support and promote startups and women entrepreneurship across the nation.
Features of Microfinance
Significant features that make our microloans accessible:
Low-income background accessibility
Small loan amounts (Micro-loans)
Short loan tenure
No collateral required
Higher repayment frequencies
Focused on income generation
Key Benefits
Expands Opportunities: Improved income accumulation for poor households through dedicated business funding.
Easy Access to Credit: Bridging the gap where traditional banks fail to offer small-ticket loans.
Future Investments: Funding for better housing, healthcare, and business expansion beyond basic needs.
Employment Generation: Creating jobs within impoverished communities.
Economic Gains: Leading to better consumption, nutrition, and overall community growth.
Types of Microfinance
1. Microloans
Collateral-free loans designed to help recipients transition toward traditional bank loans in the future.
2. Microsavings
No-minimum-balance accounts to help entrepreneurs inculcate financial discipline and save for the future.
3. Microinsurance
Low-premium coverage specifically tailored for microloan borrowers.
Purpose of Microloans
Microloans can be used for various business-related activities, such as meeting working capital requirements, maintaining cash flow, starting a new business, managing day-to-day expenses, paying salaries to staff, debt consolidation, etc. People facing trouble in availing business loans generally consider microloans or micro finance.