Financial inclusion through microfinance has become a powerful
force in improving the living conditions of poor farmers, rural
non-farm enterprises and other vulnerable groups. In its unique
ability to link the existing extensive network of India s rural
bank branches with the Self Help Groups (SHG), the National Bank of
Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) has covered up to 97
million poor households by March 2010 under its Self Help Group
Bank Linkage Programme. Policy-makers have proclaimed SHGs as the
most potent initiative for delivering financial services to the
poor in a sustainable manner."
This book presents a comprehensive scientific assessment of the
impact of the Self Help Group Bank Linkage Programme (SBLP) on the
member households. The book discusses wide-ranging topics,
including the rural financial sector in India, the history and
structure of the SBLP, the impact methodologies, the economic and
social impact of microfinance, its role in building assets while
reducing poverty and vulnerability, the role of women and their
empowerment, training and accumulation of human capital and policy
implications of lessons learned.
The empirical results show that vulnerability of the more mature
SHG members declines significantly. Vulnerability also falls for
villages with better infrastructure and for SHGs that are formed by
NGOs and linked by banks. The results strongly demonstrate that on
average, there is a significant increase in the empowerment of the
female participants. The economic impact of SBLP is found to be the
most empowering. Greater autonomy and changes in social attitudes
also lead to female empowerment. The investigation further reveals
that training (especially business training) has a definite
positive impact on assets but not on income. The impact of training
can be improved through better infrastructure (as in paved roads),
linkage model type, and the training organiser.
Bridging the gap in the existing literature and between
academics and practitioners, this book moves beyond the usual
theoretical issues in the impact assessment literature and draws on
new developments in methodology. It will be of interest to
academics, development practitioners and students of economics,
political science, sociology, public policy and development
studies."
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