61.1M€
Wallet
45 062
Number of beneficiaries
11 %
Women beneficiaries
67 %
Rural beneficiaries
Mali
Financial services
Funding granted
Loan of €1.5M*
(local currency equivalent)
Foundation Partner
since 2018
*Outstanding at grant value
Context :
Mali's economy remains dominated by the primary sector, particularly agriculture. Agriculture faces recurring challenges: repeated droughts since the 1970s, falling prices for raw materials such as cotton, and rising production costs (inputs and fuel).
The institution:
KAFO Jiginew is a Level 2 microfinance institution established in October 1987. It offers local financial services (credit, microinsurance, money transfers, and other services) to as many people as possible in Mali in order to improve their living conditions.
Impact :
Although it remains focused on the cotton sector, Kafo Jiginew also supports other agricultural activities. Its mission is to provide local financial services: collecting savings, distributing credit, money transfers, and other financial services to low-income populations.
In 2018, the Foundation consolidated its presence in West Africa with 8 new loans

© Didier Gentilhomme
Over the past year, the Grameen Crédit Agricole Foundation has strengthened its presence in West Africa with 8 new financings, including 3 from new partners.
In Mali, the Foundation has funded Kafo Jiginew, a mutual network of savings and credit unions that offers local financial services (savings, credit, microinsurance, fund transfers, and other services) to as many people as possible in Mali to improve their living conditions. The institution currently has 48,000 active clients, including 92% clients in rural areas. The Foundation has granted it a loan in local currency equivalent to €3 million over a five-year period.
In Benin, the Foundation granted a local currency loan equivalent to €1.4 million to a new partner, PEBCo Bethesda, whose mission is to improve people's living conditions by providing quality financial and non-financial services. The institution offers group and individual loans and has approximately 95,000 active borrowers, including 641 women and 331 in rural areas.
In Togo, the Foundation also funded a new partner, Assilassimé, with a loan in CFA francs equivalent to €500,000. Assilassimé is a program created in 2012 by Entrepreneurs du Monde for marginalized people. The institution provides them with financial (microcredit) and non-financial services (training, individualized support, social referrals). It currently has nearly 30,000 clients, including approximately 95,000 women.
In Burkina Faso, the Foundation also made three new investments in 2018 with existing partners, bringing its total commitments in the country to more than €4 million, or €13.81 billion of its commitments in sub-Saharan Africa as of the end of December 2018. ACFIME received a loan in FCFA equivalent to €305,000 over a three-year period. It is a microfinance institution that helps bridge the gap not covered by large MFIs operating throughout the country, as ACFIME's loans have very strong potential for social impact. It currently has 18,600 clients, including €901 billion women. PAMF-BF, for its part, received a loan in local currency equivalent to €1 million over a three-year period. The institution, which has approximately 28,400 clients, is primarily engaged in collecting savings and granting loans in Burkina Faso, in order to help better meet the financial needs of low-income populations within a strengthened framework of protection for its members and users. Finally, ACEP Burkina received a local currency loan equivalent to €1.5 million over a three-year period. Acep is a microfinance institution specializing in financing microenterprises and very small businesses in urban centers and their inner suburbs. The loans granted are primarily intended to finance working capital and investment needs. To date, the institution has 11,000 active borrowers.
Finally, in Senegal, the Foundation granted a local currency loan equivalent to €762,000 to CAURIE Microfinance, a socially responsible and financially viable microfinance institution whose mission is to contribute sustainably to the economic and social advancement of poor microentrepreneurs, primarily women. CAURIE currently has 71,000 clients, including 98% women. The Foundation also granted €100,000 in financing to SFA (Sénégalaise des Filières Alimentaires) in the form of a shareholder current account. SFA is a social enterprise that develops an inclusive value chain based on the production and marketing of rice, and in which the Foundation has been a shareholder since 2013.
For more information on the Foundation's partners, click here.
A TA program to strengthen microfinance in West Africa

© Didier Gentilhomme
Actors committed to microfinance
With over 10 years of experience in the microfinance sector, the Grameen Crédit Agricole Foundation finances and supports microfinance institutions with technical assistance. It represents over €200 million in financing, a presence in nearly 40 countries, and more than 85 institutions supported since its inception. With 37% of investments in Sub-Saharan Africa, the continent is at the heart of the Foundation's actions and its mission to contribute to the fight against poverty.
Alongside the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the Luxembourg government, the Foundation will strengthen its support for microfinance institutions in West Africa as part of a new technical assistance program. Both of the Foundation's partners have extensive experience in developing microfinance: the EIB has already committed more than €1.3 billion to the sector since the first microfinance operations in 1992, and Luxembourg accounts for 611,000 million of global microfinance assets under management.
Strengthening the Foundation's impact in West Africa
After granting the Grameen Crédit Agricole Foundation a loan equivalent to €12 million in CFA francs in 2019 to support microfinance in West Africa, the EIB has awarded, on behalf of the Government of Luxembourg, a grant of €332,000 to provide technical support to five microfinance institutions supported by the Foundation.
This two-year program will enable the Foundation to support Caurie (Senegal), Kafo Jiginew (Mali), Graine (Burkina Faso), ACEP Burkina Faso, and ACEP Niger to facilitate their digital transformation, improve risk management, and strengthen social performance management. Through this partnership with the EIB and the Government of Luxembourg, the Foundation is expanding its presence in West Africa and strengthening its value proposition to its partners in the region.