Editorial
The theme of this special issue is the potential for inclusive financial and market systems to reduce extreme poverty and improve food security.World Bank (no date) ‘Extreme poverty 2015–2021’ [online] <https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/poverty#a> [accessed 14 March 2022].
World Bank (no date) ‘Extreme poverty 2015–2021’ [online] <https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/poverty#a> [accessed 14 March 2022].
World Bank (no date) ‘Extreme poverty 2015–2021’ [online] <https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/poverty#a> [accessed 14 March 2022].
World Bank (no date) ‘Extreme poverty 2015–2021’ [online] <https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/poverty#a> [accessed 14 March 2022].
World Bank (no date) ‘Extreme poverty 2015–2021’ [online] <https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/poverty#a> [accessed 14 March 2022].
- Value chain financing: evidence from Zambia on smallholder access to finance for mechanization
- Developing agro-pastoral entrepreneurship: bundling blended finance and technology
- Building frontline market facilitators' capacity: the case of the ‘Integrating Very Poor Producers into Value Chains Field Guide’
- Development impact bonds: learning from the Asháninka cocoa and coffee case in Peru
- Trade-off between outreach and sustainability of microfinance institutions: evidence from sub-Saharan Africa