Category Archives: Social Finance

Mind the Gap – financially speaking

Falling between the finance cracks - a social solution
Falling between the finance cracks – a social solution

Dr. Nick Henry and Philip Craig are the authors of this report which examines the evidence around the need for community finance initiatives – Mind the Finance Gap.

Mind-the-Finance-Gap-summary-report available here/pdf format

Funded by The Royal Bank of Scotland and in association with the CDFA the report examines finance demand from social and business sectors which fall outside the consideration of mainstream banking  services.

These groups may be businesses and entrepreneurs, they may be civil society organisations with a wide social remit, including social enterprises or charities. They can also include individuals with unsteady regular income or homeowners with a need for financial support for renovations, for example.

In 2011, the big banks made £75 billion of loans to small and medium enterprises. Between September 2011 and August 2012 banks and building societies combined provided £7 billion of overdrafts and loans and £137 billion of credit card lending to individuals . For those businesses, organisations, individuals and homeowners that cannot access mainstream finance such as that described above,  

This report estimates current potential annual demand for community finance in the UK (excluding the Green Deal) is at some £5.45 – 6.75 billion. In contrast, in 2012, community finance organisations delivered an estimated £0.7 billion of community finance to UK businesses, civil society organisations, individuals and homeowners. Community finance investments generate a wide range of economic and social benefits (especially within the most disadvantaged and excluded communities of the UK) – and which meet a wide range of Government policy objectives.

Community finance organisations, if capitalised to do so, have the potential to generate sustainable economic development and social well being at the heart of UK communities. Currently, the majority of potential economic and social benefits are being lost to UK economy and society.

You can access a full copy of the report in pdf format here.

Regional Growth Fund adds to CDFA treasury

Money for the social business sector...
Money for social business…

The Community Development Finance Association will see its funds swell shortly, as additional monies are made available from the Regional Growth Fund and Unity Trust Bank.

The money is to be dedicated to the creation of jobs in deprived areas. The CDFA will distribute the money to its members, who lend to social enterprises, businesses and individuals in the target geographical locations.

The new funds, some £12 million, is made up of a £6 million grant from the RGF, with a further £6 million loan sourced from Unity Trust. This new money is additional to the £60 million fund already administered by the CDFA.

The CDFA recently published research that illustrated a conservative unfulfilled finance demand of £1.3 billion from the SME sector. It is part of this unmet need that the Government’s Regional Growth Fund addresses.  A £3.2 billion fund operating across England from 2011 to 2017. It supports projects and programmes that lever private sector investment to create economic growth and sustainable employment. You can find out how the RGF works in detail here.