首页> 外文期刊>Journal of international development: The journal of the development studies association >MICROFINANCE, LABOUR MARKETS AND POVERTY IN AFRICA: A STUDY OF SIX INSTITUTIONS
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MICROFINANCE, LABOUR MARKETS AND POVERTY IN AFRICA: A STUDY OF SIX INSTITUTIONS

机译:非洲的小额信贷,劳动力市场和贫困:六个机构的研究

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We examine a range of six African microfinance institutions with a view to assessing and if possible enhancing their poverty impact. The impact of microfinance loans is variable between institutions, with a tendency in particular for savings services to be taken up by people well below the poverty line, especially in South Africa and Kenya. However, many benefits to the poor from microfinance programmes, in Africa at least, are likely to come via an indirect route, via 'wider impacts' or 'spin-offs', rather than by through direct impacts on borrowers. We examine, here, three of these indirect routes: (i) Microcredit to the nonpoor can reduce poverty by sucking very poor people into the labour market as employees of microfinance clients. This mechanism is important in three of our survey countries in particular (South Africa, Uganda and Kenya); (ii) Microcredit, whether or not the proximate recipient is poor, often enhances human capital through increased expenditures on education and related improvements in health, which may then extend to poor individuals through intrahousehold and inter-generational effects. (iii) Microcredit, whether or not the proximate recipient is poor, often improves the household's risk management capacity through the enhancement of social capital, partly achieved by deliberate training and capacity-building efforts and partly through fungibility of loan proceeds into the building up of social networks. This in turn may lead to 'poverty externalities' through the extension of credit groups to include poor people, and through the stabilisation of village income, which reduces the vulnerability of the poorest to risk. In all of our case studies, many male and female beneficiaries are members of farmer groups and/or business associations; they share information on markets, prices and technology and cut costs by pooling resources for transporting goods to and from markets and by sharing storage facilities; often borrowers invest in this form of social capital, on which drawings can be made by poor people outside the borrower population, using the proceeds of their loan.
机译:我们审查了六个非洲小额信贷机构的范围,以评估并尽可能增加其对贫困的影响。小额信贷的影响在机构之间是不同的,特别是倾向于由贫困线以下的人们接受储蓄服务,特别是在南非和肯尼亚。但是,至少在非洲,小额信贷计划为穷人带来的许多好处很可能是通过间接途径获得的,即“更广泛的影响”或“附带利益”,而不是对借款人的直接影响。在这里,我们研究了以下三种间接途径:(i)向非贫困者提供小额信贷可以通过将非常贫穷的人作为小额信贷客户的雇员吸引到劳动力市场中来减少贫困。这种机制在我们三个调查国家(南非,乌干达和肯尼亚)尤其重要; (ii)小额信贷,无论附近的接受者是否贫困,通常通过增加教育支出和相关的健康改善来增加人力资本,然后通过家庭内部和代际影响扩大到贫困个人。 (iii)小额信贷,无论附近的接受者是否贫穷,通常通过提高社会资本来提高家庭的风险管理能力,其一部分是通过有意的培训和能力建设努力,部分是通过贷款收益的可替代性来建立的。社交网络。反过来,这可能会通过将信贷群体扩大到穷人,并通过稳定村民收入而导致“贫困外部性”,从而降低了最贫困人口的风险承受能力。在我们所有的案例研究中,许多男性和女性受益人都是农民团体和/或商业协会的成员。他们共享有关市场,价格和技术的信息,并通过集中用于往返市场的货物运输资源以及共享存储设施来削减成本。通常,借款人以这种社会资本形式进行投资,借款人之外的穷人可以利用其借贷收益来画图。

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