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The
Consultative Group to Assist the Poorest (CGAP) is
a consortium of 28 public and private development
agencies working together to expand access to financial
services for the poor in developing countries. CGAP
traces its roots to a June 1994 Donor Working Group
meeting in Paris. Subsequently, nine donors came together
to establish the CGAP in 1995. Funding and administration
of CGAP was sought from the World Bank, which approved
a US$30m grant from the Special Grants Program in
March 1995 for an initial three year period (Phase
I). Following a 1998 mid-course review, the members
of the Consultative Group renewed CGAP for an additional
five-year period through 2003 (Phase II). After a
second CGAP evaluation took place in 2002, the Consultative
Group authorized Phase III for a further five-year
period beginning July 2003.
Its current objective
is to support the development of financial systems
that work for the poor, by improving the capacity of
microfinance institutions to deliver flexible,
high-quality financial services to the poor on a
sustainable basis. Four major activities during Phases
I and II have been: (1) disseminating microfinance
best practices, (2) grants to selected microfinance
institutions (MFIs) to spur learning and innovation,
(3) mainstreaming microfinance within member donor
agencies, and (4) fostering national policy
environments conducive to microfinance. CGAP has a
permanent staff of 23 people based in Washington,
D.C., and Paris, and operates on an annual budget of
$10 million.

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Established:
1995
Objectives:
To help build financial systems that
work for the poor, providing large numbers
of people with diverse financial services
through a wide range of organizations.
Major
activities: (1) Disseminating microfinance
best practice, (2) grant-making to selected
MFIs, (3) mainstreaming microfinance
among member donors, and (4) fostering
national-level policy on microfinance.
FY03
expenditures: US$15.2 million
FY03
DGF allocation: US$6.7 million
FY03
other donor contributions: US$5.7
million
Location:
World Bank
Governing
partners: 28 member donors, comprising
17 bilateral agencies, 9 multilateral
agencies (incl. World Bank), and 2 private
foundations.
Latest
program-level evaluation: 2002
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