A Study of Microfinance as an Innovative Credit Delivery Mechanism in Rural India


Book Description

The key problem of Indian agriculture is finance. Several weaknesses of the rural financial delivery system, have not been corrected even after almost 40 years of bank nationalization of 1969 which focused on enhancing the outreach and access to rural credit in India. In addition to reviewing agricultural credit policies followed in India and assessing the trends and progress in the credit flow and access, this paper aims at examining the suitability of government-directed microfinance activities as an alternate tool to the formal credit delivery mechanism in rural areas. Drawing upon the field surveys conducted in four districts of two federal states in India, the paper not only indicates the wide recognition the program has gained within the rural community but also reflects the inequitable impact of microfinance initiative, and highlights a few prominent flaws in program implementation and administrative mismanagement which reduce the effectiveness of the program. While the survey findings reveal the main problem areas like unfriendly attitude of bank officials, inaccessible bank branches, non-availability of timely and adequate credit, sub-optimal selection of key economic activities and market related problems, the regression result points out that land-based activities are not remunerative for the microfinance beneficiaries. This analysis also indicates that literacy, interest rate on loanable funds, ownership of productive assets and savings are the major determinants of the income function. The paper concludes with some policy implications for improving the design for implementing the program. The paper adds to the extant knowledge about microfinance programs by comparing the performance of formal banking with the informal banking through microfinance initiatives in a developing country like India.




Microfinance in India


Book Description

Microfinance in India provides an informative and holistic status of microfinance in the country and suggests a road map for the future. A valuable source of information for policy makers, Finance and Management students, and professionals alike, it is a collection of essays by experts from diverse backgrounds on topical themes that capture the complexities of the continuously evolving microfinance sector in India. It covers major microfinance delivery models in an unbiased manner through well-researched articles.The book provides an overview on microfinance institutions and measures that help promote the same. Among other things, it reflects upon the challenges faced by the dominant credit delivery model, i.e., SHG-Bank Linkage Programme and issues related to the emerging microfinance institutions (MFIs). It also dwells upon innovations in the microfinance sector and the efforts being made to evolve new models such as SHG Federations.




Rural Credit and Self-Help Groups


Book Description

Looking to examples in Thailand and Bangladesh, this book enumerates the various factors which have been instrumental in weakening the rural credit agencies set up to relieve rural poverty in developing countries.




Microfinance, Risk-taking Behaviour and Rural Livelihood


Book Description

This book offers an in-depth analysis of borrowing and risk taking behavior of rural people, with the aim of designing effective financial products and service delivery in the rural market. Includes analysis of government schemes to promote rural development.




Rural Microfinance and Microenterprise


Book Description

Contributed articles on microfinance and small business in India.




Microfinance and Women Empowerment: A Study with Special Reference to Ramapuram Grama Panchayat


Book Description

Microfinancing expanded rapidly in India over the past two decades. India has witnessed innovations in financial options for Micro Finance Institutions (MFI), the addition of new products and services, such as insurance and pension schemes, and the entry of Internet kiosks to rural villages. It has been a recognised fact that microcredit is the most effective instrument of dealing with two crucial social issues, ie, poverty alleviation and women empowerment. The experience of microfinance concept is underlined the fact that it is an apt tool to empower the rural women economically, psychologically and socially. It is hoped to enhance the scope of empowerment of women, which has already found its way in the academic discourse on social welfare schemes and effective rural credit delivery mechanism. This will definitely pave the way for distinctively evolving a solution for Indian way of financing and women capability improvement in terms of the vision of Indian born Nobel laureate for Economics, Dr. Amartya Sen. This will also help us in evolving a societal friendly way of financing in developing the economy by improving the quality of life, living standards, to alleviate poverty, inequality, other developmental and gender issues. It will stimulate the women's imagination about a better world with less injustice and inequalities. Every social experiment or endeavor has inherent in it the potential for both success and failure. But if the experiment is in the right direction, the, failure becomes a stepping-stone to success. The pioneer in this experiment with the micro finance and women empowerment can take the first step or one step at a time, and this becomes the foundation of the ultimate success.




Improving Access to Finance for India's Rural Poor


Book Description

Annotation This book examines the current level and pattern of access to finance for India's rural households, evaluates various approaches for delivering financial services, analyzes what lies behind the lack of adequate financial access, and identifies what it would take to improve access to finance.




Micro Finance and Poverty Eradication


Book Description

Since independence in 1947, the government of India and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) have made concerted efforts to provide the poor with access to credit. Despite the phenomenal increase in the physical outreach of formal credit institutions in the past several decades, India's rural poor continue to depend on informal sources of credit. Institutions have also faced difficulties in dealing effectively with a large number of small borrowers whose credit needs are small and frequent and their ability to offer collaterals is limited. Cumbersome procedures and risk perceptions of the banks have left a gap in serving the credit needs of the rural poor. This has led to a search for alternative policies, systems and procedures, saving and loan products, other complementary services, and new delivery mechanisms that would fulfill the requirements of the poor. It is in this context that micro credit has emerged as the most suitable and practical alternative to conventional banking in reaching the hitherto unreached poor population. Micro finance is the provision of a broad range of financial services - such as deposits, loans, payments, money transfers, and insurance - to the low-income households and their micro enterprises. The basic purpose of micro finance is to provide access to financial assistance, including credit to the poor, enabling them to start/expand micro enterprises and break out of poverty. Micro credit helps the poor in making available the credit and other financial services for improving their income and living standards. The micro credit program - which was formally heralded in 1992 with a modest pilot project of linking around 500 Self-help Groups - has made rapid strides in India, exhibiting considerable democratic functioning and group dynamism. The micro credit program in India is now the largest in the world. This book contains 45 scholarly papers in the field of micro finance in India, categorized in five parts: Micro Finance: General Observations . Micro Finance, Self-help Groups, and Financial Inclusion . Micro Finance, Poverty Alleviation, and Empowerment of Women . Technical Aspects of Micro Finance . Micro Finance: Case Studies in India and Abroad.







Inclusive Finance India Report 2016


Book Description

Inclusive Finance India Report 2016 provides in-depth, well-researched, and well-analyzed evidence on how the financial inclusion agenda has progressed at various levels. The report covers a review of the performance of diverse institutional initiatives working in inclusive finance—banks, specialized banks, self-help groups, and microfinance institutions. It also covers the initiatives in technology that address last-mile delivery as well as provides an overview of new initiatives. The report focuses on a larger landscape of financial inclusion while continuing to report progress on microfinance in mainstream financial inclusion activity. It tracks the growth of financial inclusion across institutional structures and delivery models, provides a better understanding of the complexities of the sector, and contributes and informs the policy development process on inclusive finance. It also informs banks and investors, both national and international; highlights key issues that require the attention of the financial sector and policymakers; highlights the positive impact of the sector; and identifies policy and practice gaps on an annual basis. The report involves participation by the RBI, Ministry of Finance, banks, apex financial institutions, technology service providers, business correspondents, and diverse delivery models. This is the best reference book on the annual trends and progress of the financial inclusion and microfinance sector. It includes data-based analysis of all streams of financial inclusion with the most current information in terms of numbers and developments and is a must read for every practitioner in the financial inclusion value chain.