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This timely Handbook collates a range of evidence from top scholars
in the field to help readers understand who microfinance reaches,
how it helps, and why clients come back. It offers updated views on
important concepts that enable a broader framework for
understanding poverty and the corresponding financial needs of poor
households. Chapters cover recent findings on social impacts, the
role of gender, fairness of interest rates, financial resilience in
emergencies, and financial education, to provide a thorough
coverage of key areas of the field. The Handbook focuses on
delivery mechanisms for financial services including group
liability lending, agent banking, and digital finance, as well as
the special role of value chain finance and insurance for
smallholder agriculture. The case studies from both developed and
developing countries and regions, illustrating the novel aspects of
the link between microfinance, financial inclusion and development
will make this a critical read for economics and development
studies scholars. The practitioner views on the role of
microfinance included in the Handbook will also make this a
relevant and useful read for policy makers and practitioners in the
area
This book examines the economic impact and the political economy of foreign investment in the United States and of American investment abroad. It provides quantitative estimates and qualitative descriptions of the sources and uses of those funds and, in the process, an analysis of the symbiotic relationship between the New York and London stock exchanges and of the evolution of the American domestic capital market. Finally, it explores the domestic political response to foreign investment in Latin America, in Canada, and in the United States.
This work is a study of the capital transfers to the United States
in the 19th and 20th centuries and, for the latter decades of that
period, of the transfers from the United States to the rest of the
world, particularly Canada, the Caribbean, Mexico and Central and
South America. It provides a quantitative estimate of the level and
industrial composition of those transfers, and qualitative
descriptions of the sources and uses of those funds; and it
attempts to assess the role of those foreign transfers on the
economic development of the recipient economies. In the process, it
describes the evolution of the American domestic capital market.
Finally, the book explores the issue of domestic political response
to foreign investment, attempting to explain why, given the obvious
benefits of such investment, the political reaction was so negative
and so intense in Latin America and in the American West, but so
positive in Canada and the eastern United States.
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