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Communicating online microfinance as an effective poverty alleviation tool: a case study of KivaGrant, Stuart January 2018 (has links)
Microfinance is a significant component of financial inclusion, which has come to the fore in contemporary developmental literature and practice. It has been used as a poster child of millennial development. The various conceptual offshoots that are either symbiotic or causal to online microfinance are laid out here to demonstrate that as a poverty alleviation strategy, the efficacy of microfinance is at best debatable. There is also a positive reflection of online microfinance both cultivating cosmopolitanism and as being representative of a democratization of development. The research here looks at the communication practice of online microfinance –using the largest online peer-to-peer lending site kiva.org as a case study – to see what representations exist. Drawing on Ricoeur's discourse and a textual application of Laclau's chains of equivalence, a content analysis is used to identify what immediate and latent narratives are present. This considers the presence and absence of word chains to convey, construct and conflate meanings through the text. To achieve this, a quantitative and qualitative approach is used to look at the data gathered, and also to contextualise the data through the related concepts set out in the first section.The analysis shows two representations of online microfinance: firstly, a homogenization of meaning that fits a neoliberal discourse, minimizing the problems with microfinance as a development intervention; and secondly, a decontextualization of borrowers, rendering them placeless and apolitical, with the loan itself being of more weight than the life of the borrower.
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Microfinance and welfare of households in Ngcobo villages in the Eastern Cape ProvinceNkungwana, Sihle Charity 17 February 2021 (has links)
This research examined the effectiveness of microfinance on welfare of rural households in Ngcobo in the Eastern Cape through an administered survey. The study targeted fifty households based on convenience sampling technique and used a number of welfare indicators but selected food consumption patterns; roof, floor and walls of the main dwelling house; cooking fuel used and transport, livestock and household appliances and electronics asset ownership patterns to derive household welfare index. The derived household welfare index of those households which have had microfinance access was then compared with that of those households that have never accessed microfinance. The general idea was that microfinance access would result in relatively higher welfare. The study found microfinance access to have a significantly high impact t highly on household welfare index of those households that had participated in microfinance in Ngcobo. The higher household welfare index meant that microfinance beneficiaries had relatively higher protein consumption patterns, used more durable material for roofs, wall and floors of their main dwellings, had better asset ownership patterns in particular variety of household appliances and electronics. The study also found that there are other control variable such as employment, age, household size and education that interfere with access to microfinance. Lastly, the study also found that that distance of a household from a microfinance outlet or institutions plays a significant hindrance factor in microfinance access. In other words, those households in Mjanyana and Clarkebury, which are situated within more than 40 kilometres from the microfinance institutions, had lower microfinance access. Based on the findings, the study recommends that policy makers in the province pay attention in refining the policy to ensure that control variables identified to interfere with microfinance access do not close out the intended beneficiaries of microfinance. Also, the study recommends that policy makers and microfinance institutions be innovative in ensuring those in deep rural areas are offered the same opportunity to access microfinance within Ngcobo, despite their distance from the microfinance outlets.
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More money for less work – or more work for less money? : Microfinance in the context of poverty and extreme working hours in the Kenyan informal economySvensson, Axel January 2021 (has links)
The Sub-Saharan African informal economy is often characterised by underemployment where workers spend countless hours earning bare minimum. This study investigates the impact of microfinance participation on earnings, time spent on market work, household work and leisure among women in the informal economy in Kenya. The findings are that microfinance on average increases earnings and reduces working hours due to a negatively sloping labour supply curve. This can be interpreted as an increase in productivity. As working hours are reduced, it is argued that time spent on the two other activities increase proportionally. If household work and leisure can be interpreted as activities with positive marginal utility, then these changes can be seen as income effects.
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Are microfinance institutions in South Africa efficient? - A case study in the Limpopo provinceKallis, Denver January 2002 (has links)
Magister Commercii - MCom / This minithesis aims to determine whether South Africa's microfinance institutions are
operating efficiently and whether efficiency can be enhanced. Using the United Nations
model and framework for efficiency, it examines the key principles of operational
efficiency in the South African microfinance context.
The paper begins with an overview of the literature relating to the principles of efficiency
as underscored in the United Nations model.
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Microfinance Effect on Income Inequality in Latin America : A cross-country panel data study on the effects of microfinance on the income inequality in Latin AmericaAntoine, Gabriel, Möllestam, William January 2020 (has links)
This paper examines if increased microfinance intensity reduces the income inequality in 11 Latin American countries from 2005 to 2015. Gini coefficient was used as a measure of income inequality, while microfinance intensity was derived by dividing the number of active borrowers by the country's population. A panel data was constructed with 384 microfinance institutes present in the countries studied. To examine the relationship, a pooled OLS and a country clustered fixed-effects model was conducted using the specific-to-general method. Both methods showed a significant negative relationship between the Gini coefficient and microfinance intensity. However, it was a relatively small impact at -0.004% for every percent increase in microfinance, which confirms our hypothesis that a higher MFI participation leads to a decrease in income inequality. These results are in line with previous studies conducted, although, to our knowledge, this is the first macroeconomic framework study conducted on multiple Latin American countries at once.
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Rethinking the design and implementation of financial services for poverty reduction: A case of Northern GhanaNaab, Gilbert Z. January 2019 (has links)
The thesis empirically examines how microfinance products are designed and
implemented, and the implications for clients’ households and sources of
livelihood. The study argues that the design of products and implementation
that reflect the livelihood needs and poverty context of clients is one of the
effective ways to reduce poverty. It investigates the microfinance operations of
three financial institutions: Sinapi Aba Trust (SAT), St Joseph’s Cooperative
Credit Union (CCU) and Sonzele Rural Bank (SRB) in Jirapa, a municipality in
Northern Ghana. The study deployed a mixed-methods approach to collect data
from six rural and urban communities. Data was sought from secondary
sources, 20 interviews, 10 focus group discussions and 120 questionnaires.
The research adopted the Sustainable Livelihoods and the Making Markets
Work for the Poor approaches as a guide in the framework of analysis. The
study, using qualitative and quantitative analytical tools found that product
designs of SAT and SRB did not reflect the needs and poverty context of the
majority of their clients. Clients of SAT and SRB were found to be less involved
in the product design processes, suggesting a top-down institutional approach
that seldom incorporated the needs of the poor. The method of group formation
has a substantial implication on members’ poverty outcomes. Groups involving
only females had a significant and positive relationship with members’
household and business outcomes, while members of male-only groups had a
negative relationship with their household outcomes. The thesis concludes that
accessible interest on loans and incentives to encourage savings would make
microfinance markets work more sustainably for the rural poor. The findings
challenge a reconsideration of the design of microfinance products to integrate
financial technology as an efficient approach to deliver financial services,
especially in rural areas.
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Microequity a new model for microfinance in the u.sBall, Joseph 01 May 2013 (has links)
Most of the research on microfinance focuses on the microloan activities of microfinance institutions such as Grameen Bank of Bangladesh and Banco Sol of South America. These institutions make small loans to the poor to help them engage in income generating activities. Many organizations have tried to translate this practice to the United States, but due to fundamental differences between the advanced U.S. business environment and that found in the developing world, such attempts have been met with limited success. There is a substantial amount of research on microfinance institutions and activities in the U.S., however almost all of the activity is focused on making microloans. In this paper, a new method for pursuing microfinance, microequity, is put forward as a potential candidate for successfully and sustainably implementing microfinance in the United States. The preliminary conclusions reached in this paper, based on research into traditional microfinance internationally and in the U.S. as well as research on the pros and cons of traditional equity and debt financing, show that a microequity model for microfinance could offer a solution to the difficulties that have prevented microfinance from being successfully and sustainably implemented in the United States.
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Microfinance in Algeria, Tunisia, and LebanonChamberlain, Elaine 01 May 2015 (has links)
In theory, microfinance is a system of decentralized bankers lending to the poor in order to improve economic systems and emphasize entrepreneurial development. Specifically, within the Middle East and North Africa region, the poor economic performances have been closely linked to poor savings and investments. This thesis explores the various factors which affect the microfinance sector in three countries in the Middle East and North Africa region: Algeria, Tunisia, and Lebanon. Algeria, Tunisia, and Lebanon, have similar cultural and political histories that could potentially affect the development of microfinance within the state. Microfinance institutes aim at economic improvements, but the success of microfinance is contingent on different factors in disparate countries. For this reason, focusing on these particular former French countries make it possible to assess if the history and government policies of a country have an impact on the extent to which microfinance is incorporated in the alleviation of poverty.
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Pooling versus separating regulation: The performance of banks and microfinance in Bolivia under systemic shocksVillafani-Ibarnegaray, Marcelo 08 September 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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An Empirical Examination of Factors Influencing Participant Behavior in Crowdfunded MarketsBurtch, David Gordon January 2013 (has links)
Crowdfunded marketplaces have recently emerged as a novel avenue for entrepreneurs to raise capital in support of innovative ideas and ventures. In these markets, any individual can propose a project, and interested others can contribute their funds to support it. The economic potential of these markets has recently become apparent and, as a result they have begun gaining significant attention from legislators and regulators, who see crowdfunding as a possible solution to the economic woes currently facing the country. However, the behavior of participants in these marketplaces, a key factor that must be accounted for in any effort to formulate policy or regulation, or to identify appropriate design practices, remains poorly understood, primarily due to the many novelties of crowdfunding. Bearing in mind the need to ensure crowdfunding's sustainability as an industry, the formulation of policy and regulation, as well as best practices for participants, I report on three empirical studies that seek to identify and quantify a variety of important aspects of, and influences upon, participant behavior in crowdfunded markets. These three studies, presented as separate essays herein, i) explore the influence upon subsequent contributors from social information about prior others' actions, ii) examine the frictions that arise due to cultural differences between and amongst users, and iii) assess crowdfunders' use of information-hiding mechanisms, and the subsequent impact on later contributors in the market. In regard to each, I discuss the relevant theory, the methodology, data sources, results and implications. I conclude by highlighting the contributions of my work, and possible avenues for future research. / Business Administration/Management Information Systems
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