Microfinance: A Reader

Front Cover
David Hulme, Thankom Arun
Routledge, 2009 M01 13 - 256 pages

Microfinance has become an important component of development, poverty reduction and economic regeneration strategy around the world. By the early twenty first century tens of millions of people in more than 100 countries were accessing services from formal and semi-formal microfinance institutions (MFIs). Much of the initial attention on microcredit came through work on Bangladesh’s much-lauded Grameen Bank but, there are now many different ‘models’ for microfinance and many countries have substantial microfinance sectors.

This timely book, written by one of the major players in the UK in development economics explores, amongst others, topics such as:

  • microfinance and poverty reduction
  • microfinance, gender and social development
  • microinsurance
  • regulating and supervising microfinance institutions.

Topical and insightful, this important text examines what has become a vast global industry employing hundreds of thousands of people and attracting the attention of large numbers of governments, banks, aid agencies, non-governmental organizations and consultancy firms.

 

Contents

1 INTRODUCTION
1
The way forward?
7
3 THE MICROFINANCE SCHISM
17
4 THE NEED TO SAVE
36
The case for a financial systems approach
45
Is there a conflict between growth and poverty alleviation?
65
Learning from the IGVGD program in Bangladesh
78
Reevaluating the empowerment potential of loans to women in rural Bangladesh
108
9 MAKING MICROFINANCE MORE CLIENT LED
143
From subsidized microcredit to market based microfinance
163
11 MICROINSURANCE THE RISKS PERILS AND OPPORTUNITIES
171
The case of microfinance
186
Theory experience and better practice
198
14 THE FUTURE OF MICROFINANCE
225
INDEX
232
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