Microfinance dreams
The microcredit dream involved using loans to solve poverty. But, the dream eventually proved to incorporate serious misconceptions: that most borrowers could become successful entrepreneurs; that new businesses were easy to start and sustain; that poor borrowers had many attractive investment opportunities; that most loans were used in income-producing investments; that borrowing did not add to the borrower’s risks; and that microlending was inexpensive. Eventually, many microloans were used to deal with immediate risks facing the household, rather than to build income streams. Nonetheless, microlending revealed that many poor people had significant capacities to borrow and repay loans, and that borrowing made their lives less difficult. Recent successes in mobilizing savings indicate that poor people also may have surprisingly large capacities to save, thereby fostering a microsaving dream. The paper compares the strengths and weaknesses of two popular models used to promote savings: the savings-group model, first used in Africa, and the self-help-group model widely used in Asia. The savings-group model offers savers more attractive features than does the self-help-group model. Savings groups offer balanced menus of financial services, and, while neither loans nor savings are cures for poverty, both can significantly ease the plight of the poor.Adams, D. and Vogel, R. (2013) ‘Through the thicket of credit impact assessments’, in J.P. Gueyie, R. Manos, and J. Yaron (eds.), Microfinance in Developing Countries, pp. 36–61, London: Palgrave/Macmillan.
Allen, H. and Panetta, D. (2010) Savings Groups: What Are They? Washington, DC: SEEP Group.
Anyango, E., Esipisu, E., Opuku, L., Johnson, S., Malkamaki, M. and Musoke, C. (2007) Village Savings and Loan Associations in Zanzibar, London: DFID.
Arbuckle, L. and Adams, D.W. (2000) ‘Reforming credit unions in Honduras’, in G.D. Westley and B. Branch (eds.), Safe Money: Building Effective Credit Unions in Latin America, pp. 115–28, Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank.
Aryeetey, E. and Steele, W. (1995) ‘Savings collectors and financial intermediation in Ghana’, Savings and Development 19(2): 191–212.
Ashe, J. and Neilan, K. (2014) In Their Own Hands: How Savings Groups are Revolutionizing Development, San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler.
Attanasio, O., Augsburg, B., De Haas, R., Fitzsimons, E. and Harmgart, H. (2011) Group Lending or Individual Lending? Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment in Mongolia, Working Paper No. 133, London: European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
Banerjee, A., Karlan, D. and Zinman, J. (2015) ‘Six randomized evaluations of microcredit: introduction and further steps’, American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 7(1): 1–21 <http://dx.doi.org/10/1257/app.20140287>.
Bouman, F. (1995) ‘Rotating and accumulating savings and credit associations: a development perspective’, World Development, 23(3): 371–84.
Collins, D., Morduch, J., Rutherford, S. and Ruthven, O. (2009) Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
del Mel, S., McKenzie, D.J. and Woodruff, C. (2008) ‘Returns to capital in microenterprises: evidence from a field experiment’, Quarterly Journal of Economics 123(4): 1329–72 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2011.646989>.
Duvendack, M. and Palmer-Jones, R. (2012) ‘High noon for microfinance impact evaluations: re-investigating the evidence from Bangladesh’, Journal of Development Studies 48: 1864–80 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2011.646989>.
Harper, M. (2012) ‘Microfinance interest rates and client returns’, Journal of Agrarian Change 12(4): 564–74.
Hulme, D. (2000) ‘Is microdebt good for poor people? A note on the dark side of microfinance’, Small Enterprise Development 11(1): 26–8 <http://dx.doi.org/10.3362/0957-1329.2000.006>.
Karnani, A. (2007) ‘Microfinance misses its mark’, Stanford Social Innovations Review Summer: 34–40.
Liedholm, C. (2002) ‘Small firm dynamics: evidence from Africa and Latin America’, Small Business Economics 18: 227–42.
Martin, X. (2014) How Do Savings Groups Work: Experiences from Latin America and the Caribbean, Pro-savings Program, Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank.
McKenzie, D. and Woodruff, C. (2008) ‘Experimental evidence on returns to capital and access to finance in Mexico’, The World Bank Economic Review 22(3): 457–82 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/wber/lhr/lhn017>.
Mine, S., Stokes, S., Lowe, M. and Zoubek, S. (2013) Post-Project Replications of Savings Groups in Uganda, Durham, NC: DATU Research.
Nair, T. and Tankha, A. (2014) Microfinance India: State of the Sector Report 2013, New Delhi: Sage Publications.
Nayar, C. (1973) Chit Finance, Bombay: Vora and Company.
Patten, R. and Rosengard, J. (1991) Progress with Profit: The Development of Rural Banking in Indonesia, San Francisco: Institute of Contemporary Studies Press.
Poyo, J. (1995) Expansion of Rural Financial Services: The Development of a Community-based Rural Credit Union Network in the Dominican Republic (1984–1993), Working Paper No. 10, Enterprise and Cooperative Development Department, Geneva, Switzerland: International Labour Office.
Roodman, D. and Morduch, J. (2014) ‘The impact of microcredit on the poor in Bangladesh: revisiting the evidence’, Journal of Development Studies 50(4): 583–604 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2013.858122>.
Rosenberg, R., Gonzalez, A. and Narain, S. (2009) The New Microlenders: Are the Poor Being Exploited by High Microcredit Interest Rates? CGAP Occasional Paper No. 15, February, Washington, DC: CGAP.
Rutherford, S. (2004) ‘The microfinance market: huge, diverse – and waiting for you’, in H. Lont and O. Hospes (eds.), Livelihood and Microfinance: Anthropological and Sociological Perspectives on Savings and Debt, pp. 263–85, Delft, Netherlands: Eburon Academic Publishers.
Schreiner, M. (2000) ‘Formal Roscas in Argentina’, Development in Practice 10(2): 229–32.
Seibel, H. (1985) ‘Saving for development: a linkage model for informal and formal financial markets’, Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture 30: 390–8.
Seibel, H. (2003) Centenary Rural Development Bank, Uganda: A Flagship of Rural Bank Reforms in Africa, Working paper No. 2003-3, Cologne: Development Research Center, University of Cologne.
Shane, S. (2009) ‘Why encouraging more people to become entrepreneurs is bad public policy’, Small Business Economics 33: 141–9.
Singer, S. (2015) Global Entrepreneurship Monitor: 2014 Global Report, London: London Business School.
Tanhka, A. (2012) Banking on Self-Help Groups: Twenty Years On, New Delhi: Sage.
Udry, C. and Anagol, S. (2006) ‘The return to capital in Ghana’, American Economic Review 96(2): 388–93.
Vogel, R. (1984) ‘Savings mobilization: the forgotten half of rural finance’, in D. Adams, J. von Pischke, and D. Graham (eds.), Undermining Rural Development With Cheap Credit, pp. 248–65, Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
Wilson, K., Harper, M. and Griffith, M. (2010) Financial Promise for the Poor: How Groups Build Microsavings, Sterling, VI: Kumarian Press.
Zollmann, J. (2014) Kenya Financial Diaries: The Financial Lives of the Poor, Nairobi: Financial Sector Deepening.
Adams, D. and Vogel, R. (2013) ‘Through the thicket of credit impact assessments’, in J.P. Gueyie, R. Manos, and J. Yaron (eds.), Microfinance in Developing Countries, pp. 36–61, London: Palgrave/Macmillan.
Allen, H. and Panetta, D. (2010) Savings Groups: What Are They? Washington, DC: SEEP Group.
Anyango, E., Esipisu, E., Opuku, L., Johnson, S., Malkamaki, M. and Musoke, C. (2007) Village Savings and Loan Associations in Zanzibar, London: DFID.
Arbuckle, L. and Adams, D.W. (2000) ‘Reforming credit unions in Honduras’, in G.D. Westley and B. Branch (eds.), Safe Money: Building Effective Credit Unions in Latin America, pp. 115–28, Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank.
Aryeetey, E. and Steele, W. (1995) ‘Savings collectors and financial intermediation in Ghana’, Savings and Development 19(2): 191–212.
Ashe, J. and Neilan, K. (2014) In Their Own Hands: How Savings Groups are Revolutionizing Development, San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler.
Attanasio, O., Augsburg, B., De Haas, R., Fitzsimons, E. and Harmgart, H. (2011) Group Lending or Individual Lending? Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment in Mongolia, Working Paper No. 133, London: European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
Banerjee, A., Karlan, D. and Zinman, J. (2015) ‘Six randomized evaluations of microcredit: introduction and further steps’, American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 7(1): 1–21 <http://dx.doi.org/10/1257/app.20140287>.
Bouman, F. (1995) ‘Rotating and accumulating savings and credit associations: a development perspective’, World Development, 23(3): 371–84.
Collins, D., Morduch, J., Rutherford, S. and Ruthven, O. (2009) Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
del Mel, S., McKenzie, D.J. and Woodruff, C. (2008) ‘Returns to capital in microenterprises: evidence from a field experiment’, Quarterly Journal of Economics 123(4): 1329–72 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2011.646989>.
Duvendack, M. and Palmer-Jones, R. (2012) ‘High noon for microfinance impact evaluations: re-investigating the evidence from Bangladesh’, Journal of Development Studies 48: 1864–80 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2011.646989>.
Harper, M. (2012) ‘Microfinance interest rates and client returns’, Journal of Agrarian Change 12(4): 564–74.
Hulme, D. (2000) ‘Is microdebt good for poor people? A note on the dark side of microfinance’, Small Enterprise Development 11(1): 26–8 <http://dx.doi.org/10.3362/0957-1329.2000.006>.
Karnani, A. (2007) ‘Microfinance misses its mark’, Stanford Social Innovations Review Summer: 34–40.
Liedholm, C. (2002) ‘Small firm dynamics: evidence from Africa and Latin America’, Small Business Economics 18: 227–42.
Martin, X. (2014) How Do Savings Groups Work: Experiences from Latin America and the Caribbean, Pro-savings Program, Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank.
McKenzie, D. and Woodruff, C. (2008) ‘Experimental evidence on returns to capital and access to finance in Mexico’, The World Bank Economic Review 22(3): 457–82 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/wber/lhr/lhn017>.
Mine, S., Stokes, S., Lowe, M. and Zoubek, S. (2013) Post-Project Replications of Savings Groups in Uganda, Durham, NC: DATU Research.
Nair, T. and Tankha, A. (2014) Microfinance India: State of the Sector Report 2013, New Delhi: Sage Publications.
Nayar, C. (1973) Chit Finance, Bombay: Vora and Company.
Patten, R. and Rosengard, J. (1991) Progress with Profit: The Development of Rural Banking in Indonesia, San Francisco: Institute of Contemporary Studies Press.
Poyo, J. (1995) Expansion of Rural Financial Services: The Development of a Community-based Rural Credit Union Network in the Dominican Republic (1984–1993), Working Paper No. 10, Enterprise and Cooperative Development Department, Geneva, Switzerland: International Labour Office.
Roodman, D. and Morduch, J. (2014) ‘The impact of microcredit on the poor in Bangladesh: revisiting the evidence’, Journal of Development Studies 50(4): 583–604 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2013.858122>.
Rosenberg, R., Gonzalez, A. and Narain, S. (2009) The New Microlenders: Are the Poor Being Exploited by High Microcredit Interest Rates? CGAP Occasional Paper No. 15, February, Washington, DC: CGAP.
Rutherford, S. (2004) ‘The microfinance market: huge, diverse – and waiting for you’, in H. Lont and O. Hospes (eds.), Livelihood and Microfinance: Anthropological and Sociological Perspectives on Savings and Debt, pp. 263–85, Delft, Netherlands: Eburon Academic Publishers.
Schreiner, M. (2000) ‘Formal Roscas in Argentina’, Development in Practice 10(2): 229–32.
Seibel, H. (1985) ‘Saving for development: a linkage model for informal and formal financial markets’, Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture 30: 390–8.
Seibel, H. (2003) Centenary Rural Development Bank, Uganda: A Flagship of Rural Bank Reforms in Africa, Working paper No. 2003-3, Cologne: Development Research Center, University of Cologne.
Shane, S. (2009) ‘Why encouraging more people to become entrepreneurs is bad public policy’, Small Business Economics 33: 141–9.
Singer, S. (2015) Global Entrepreneurship Monitor: 2014 Global Report, London: London Business School.
Tanhka, A. (2012) Banking on Self-Help Groups: Twenty Years On, New Delhi: Sage.
Udry, C. and Anagol, S. (2006) ‘The return to capital in Ghana’, American Economic Review 96(2): 388–93.
Vogel, R. (1984) ‘Savings mobilization: the forgotten half of rural finance’, in D. Adams, J. von Pischke, and D. Graham (eds.), Undermining Rural Development With Cheap Credit, pp. 248–65, Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
Wilson, K., Harper, M. and Griffith, M. (2010) Financial Promise for the Poor: How Groups Build Microsavings, Sterling, VI: Kumarian Press.
Zollmann, J. (2014) Kenya Financial Diaries: The Financial Lives of the Poor, Nairobi: Financial Sector Deepening.
Adams, D. and Vogel, R. (2013) ‘Through the thicket of credit impact assessments’, in J.P. Gueyie, R. Manos, and J. Yaron (eds.), Microfinance in Developing Countries, pp. 36–61, London: Palgrave/Macmillan.
Allen, H. and Panetta, D. (2010) Savings Groups: What Are They? Washington, DC: SEEP Group.
Anyango, E., Esipisu, E., Opuku, L., Johnson, S., Malkamaki, M. and Musoke, C. (2007) Village Savings and Loan Associations in Zanzibar, London: DFID.
Arbuckle, L. and Adams, D.W. (2000) ‘Reforming credit unions in Honduras’, in G.D. Westley and B. Branch (eds.), Safe Money: Building Effective Credit Unions in Latin America, pp. 115–28, Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank.
Aryeetey, E. and Steele, W. (1995) ‘Savings collectors and financial intermediation in Ghana’, Savings and Development 19(2): 191–212.
Ashe, J. and Neilan, K. (2014) In Their Own Hands: How Savings Groups are Revolutionizing Development, San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler.
Attanasio, O., Augsburg, B., De Haas, R., Fitzsimons, E. and Harmgart, H. (2011) Group Lending or Individual Lending? Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment in Mongolia, Working Paper No. 133, London: European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
Banerjee, A., Karlan, D. and Zinman, J. (2015) ‘Six randomized evaluations of microcredit: introduction and further steps’, American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 7(1): 1–21 <http://dx.doi.org/10/1257/app.20140287>.
Bouman, F. (1995) ‘Rotating and accumulating savings and credit associations: a development perspective’, World Development, 23(3): 371–84.
Collins, D., Morduch, J., Rutherford, S. and Ruthven, O. (2009) Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
del Mel, S., McKenzie, D.J. and Woodruff, C. (2008) ‘Returns to capital in microenterprises: evidence from a field experiment’, Quarterly Journal of Economics 123(4): 1329–72 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2011.646989>.
Duvendack, M. and Palmer-Jones, R. (2012) ‘High noon for microfinance impact evaluations: re-investigating the evidence from Bangladesh’, Journal of Development Studies 48: 1864–80 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2011.646989>.
Harper, M. (2012) ‘Microfinance interest rates and client returns’, Journal of Agrarian Change 12(4): 564–74.
Hulme, D. (2000) ‘Is microdebt good for poor people? A note on the dark side of microfinance’, Small Enterprise Development 11(1): 26–8 <http://dx.doi.org/10.3362/0957-1329.2000.006>.
Karnani, A. (2007) ‘Microfinance misses its mark’, Stanford Social Innovations Review Summer: 34–40.
Liedholm, C. (2002) ‘Small firm dynamics: evidence from Africa and Latin America’, Small Business Economics 18: 227–42.
Martin, X. (2014) How Do Savings Groups Work: Experiences from Latin America and the Caribbean, Pro-savings Program, Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank.
McKenzie, D. and Woodruff, C. (2008) ‘Experimental evidence on returns to capital and access to finance in Mexico’, The World Bank Economic Review 22(3): 457–82 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/wber/lhr/lhn017>.
Mine, S., Stokes, S., Lowe, M. and Zoubek, S. (2013) Post-Project Replications of Savings Groups in Uganda, Durham, NC: DATU Research.
Nair, T. and Tankha, A. (2014) Microfinance India: State of the Sector Report 2013, New Delhi: Sage Publications.
Nayar, C. (1973) Chit Finance, Bombay: Vora and Company.
Patten, R. and Rosengard, J. (1991) Progress with Profit: The Development of Rural Banking in Indonesia, San Francisco: Institute of Contemporary Studies Press.
Poyo, J. (1995) Expansion of Rural Financial Services: The Development of a Community-based Rural Credit Union Network in the Dominican Republic (1984–1993), Working Paper No. 10, Enterprise and Cooperative Development Department, Geneva, Switzerland: International Labour Office.
Roodman, D. and Morduch, J. (2014) ‘The impact of microcredit on the poor in Bangladesh: revisiting the evidence’, Journal of Development Studies 50(4): 583–604 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2013.858122>.
Rosenberg, R., Gonzalez, A. and Narain, S. (2009) The New Microlenders: Are the Poor Being Exploited by High Microcredit Interest Rates? CGAP Occasional Paper No. 15, February, Washington, DC: CGAP.
Rutherford, S. (2004) ‘The microfinance market: huge, diverse – and waiting for you’, in H. Lont and O. Hospes (eds.), Livelihood and Microfinance: Anthropological and Sociological Perspectives on Savings and Debt, pp. 263–85, Delft, Netherlands: Eburon Academic Publishers.
Schreiner, M. (2000) ‘Formal Roscas in Argentina’, Development in Practice 10(2): 229–32.
Seibel, H. (1985) ‘Saving for development: a linkage model for informal and formal financial markets’, Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture 30: 390–8.
Seibel, H. (2003) Centenary Rural Development Bank, Uganda: A Flagship of Rural Bank Reforms in Africa, Working paper No. 2003-3, Cologne: Development Research Center, University of Cologne.
Shane, S. (2009) ‘Why encouraging more people to become entrepreneurs is bad public policy’, Small Business Economics 33: 141–9.
Singer, S. (2015) Global Entrepreneurship Monitor: 2014 Global Report, London: London Business School.
Tanhka, A. (2012) Banking on Self-Help Groups: Twenty Years On, New Delhi: Sage.
Udry, C. and Anagol, S. (2006) ‘The return to capital in Ghana’, American Economic Review 96(2): 388–93.
Vogel, R. (1984) ‘Savings mobilization: the forgotten half of rural finance’, in D. Adams, J. von Pischke, and D. Graham (eds.), Undermining Rural Development With Cheap Credit, pp. 248–65, Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
Wilson, K., Harper, M. and Griffith, M. (2010) Financial Promise for the Poor: How Groups Build Microsavings, Sterling, VI: Kumarian Press.
Zollmann, J. (2014) Kenya Financial Diaries: The Financial Lives of the Poor, Nairobi: Financial Sector Deepening.
Adams, D. and Vogel, R. (2013) ‘Through the thicket of credit impact assessments’, in J.P. Gueyie, R. Manos, and J. Yaron (eds.), Microfinance in Developing Countries, pp. 36–61, London: Palgrave/Macmillan.
Allen, H. and Panetta, D. (2010) Savings Groups: What Are They? Washington, DC: SEEP Group.
Anyango, E., Esipisu, E., Opuku, L., Johnson, S., Malkamaki, M. and Musoke, C. (2007) Village Savings and Loan Associations in Zanzibar, London: DFID.
Arbuckle, L. and Adams, D.W. (2000) ‘Reforming credit unions in Honduras’, in G.D. Westley and B. Branch (eds.), Safe Money: Building Effective Credit Unions in Latin America, pp. 115–28, Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank.
Aryeetey, E. and Steele, W. (1995) ‘Savings collectors and financial intermediation in Ghana’, Savings and Development 19(2): 191–212.
Ashe, J. and Neilan, K. (2014) In Their Own Hands: How Savings Groups are Revolutionizing Development, San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler.
Attanasio, O., Augsburg, B., De Haas, R., Fitzsimons, E. and Harmgart, H. (2011) Group Lending or Individual Lending? Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment in Mongolia, Working Paper No. 133, London: European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
Banerjee, A., Karlan, D. and Zinman, J. (2015) ‘Six randomized evaluations of microcredit: introduction and further steps’, American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 7(1): 1–21 <http://dx.doi.org/10/1257/app.20140287>.
Bouman, F. (1995) ‘Rotating and accumulating savings and credit associations: a development perspective’, World Development, 23(3): 371–84.
Collins, D., Morduch, J., Rutherford, S. and Ruthven, O. (2009) Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
del Mel, S., McKenzie, D.J. and Woodruff, C. (2008) ‘Returns to capital in microenterprises: evidence from a field experiment’, Quarterly Journal of Economics 123(4): 1329–72 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2011.646989>.
Duvendack, M. and Palmer-Jones, R. (2012) ‘High noon for microfinance impact evaluations: re-investigating the evidence from Bangladesh’, Journal of Development Studies 48: 1864–80 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2011.646989>.
Harper, M. (2012) ‘Microfinance interest rates and client returns’, Journal of Agrarian Change 12(4): 564–74.
Hulme, D. (2000) ‘Is microdebt good for poor people? A note on the dark side of microfinance’, Small Enterprise Development 11(1): 26–8 <http://dx.doi.org/10.3362/0957-1329.2000.006>.
Karnani, A. (2007) ‘Microfinance misses its mark’, Stanford Social Innovations Review Summer: 34–40.
Liedholm, C. (2002) ‘Small firm dynamics: evidence from Africa and Latin America’, Small Business Economics 18: 227–42.
Martin, X. (2014) How Do Savings Groups Work: Experiences from Latin America and the Caribbean, Pro-savings Program, Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank.
McKenzie, D. and Woodruff, C. (2008) ‘Experimental evidence on returns to capital and access to finance in Mexico’, The World Bank Economic Review 22(3): 457–82 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/wber/lhr/lhn017>.
Mine, S., Stokes, S., Lowe, M. and Zoubek, S. (2013) Post-Project Replications of Savings Groups in Uganda, Durham, NC: DATU Research.
Nair, T. and Tankha, A. (2014) Microfinance India: State of the Sector Report 2013, New Delhi: Sage Publications.
Nayar, C. (1973) Chit Finance, Bombay: Vora and Company.
Patten, R. and Rosengard, J. (1991) Progress with Profit: The Development of Rural Banking in Indonesia, San Francisco: Institute of Contemporary Studies Press.
Poyo, J. (1995) Expansion of Rural Financial Services: The Development of a Community-based Rural Credit Union Network in the Dominican Republic (1984–1993), Working Paper No. 10, Enterprise and Cooperative Development Department, Geneva, Switzerland: International Labour Office.
Roodman, D. and Morduch, J. (2014) ‘The impact of microcredit on the poor in Bangladesh: revisiting the evidence’, Journal of Development Studies 50(4): 583–604 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2013.858122>.
Rosenberg, R., Gonzalez, A. and Narain, S. (2009) The New Microlenders: Are the Poor Being Exploited by High Microcredit Interest Rates? CGAP Occasional Paper No. 15, February, Washington, DC: CGAP.
Rutherford, S. (2004) ‘The microfinance market: huge, diverse – and waiting for you’, in H. Lont and O. Hospes (eds.), Livelihood and Microfinance: Anthropological and Sociological Perspectives on Savings and Debt, pp. 263–85, Delft, Netherlands: Eburon Academic Publishers.
Schreiner, M. (2000) ‘Formal Roscas in Argentina’, Development in Practice 10(2): 229–32.
Seibel, H. (1985) ‘Saving for development: a linkage model for informal and formal financial markets’, Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture 30: 390–8.
Seibel, H. (2003) Centenary Rural Development Bank, Uganda: A Flagship of Rural Bank Reforms in Africa, Working paper No. 2003-3, Cologne: Development Research Center, University of Cologne.
Shane, S. (2009) ‘Why encouraging more people to become entrepreneurs is bad public policy’, Small Business Economics 33: 141–9.
Singer, S. (2015) Global Entrepreneurship Monitor: 2014 Global Report, London: London Business School.
Tanhka, A. (2012) Banking on Self-Help Groups: Twenty Years On, New Delhi: Sage.
Udry, C. and Anagol, S. (2006) ‘The return to capital in Ghana’, American Economic Review 96(2): 388–93.
Vogel, R. (1984) ‘Savings mobilization: the forgotten half of rural finance’, in D. Adams, J. von Pischke, and D. Graham (eds.), Undermining Rural Development With Cheap Credit, pp. 248–65, Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
Wilson, K., Harper, M. and Griffith, M. (2010) Financial Promise for the Poor: How Groups Build Microsavings, Sterling, VI: Kumarian Press.
Zollmann, J. (2014) Kenya Financial Diaries: The Financial Lives of the Poor, Nairobi: Financial Sector Deepening.
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