Banking on Self-help Groups


Book Description

Banking on Self-help Groups reviews the existing state of affairs in respect of the SHG (Self-help Group) movement and addresses the question of what should be the next phase of development of the SHGs. It identifies the policy gaps and opportunities that exist for the SHGs to be mainstreamed further into the formal financial system. The author examines elements of strategy and design being adopted by the National Rural Livelihoods Mission as also the potential role of NABARD in the development of SHGs in the future. The study focuses on three core issues pertaining to SHGs. These relate to (i) cost-effectiveness, (ii) sustainability, and (iii) impact, i.e., the development cost of SHGs and SHG-based institutions, the sustainability of SHG models and community institutions fostered by them, and the economic and social impact on SHG members. The book concludes with a discussion of proposals and institutional arrangements that provide the way forward for the continued and uninterrupted growth of SHGs as an agency for change in the rural sector of India.




Microfinance Self Help Groups in India


Book Description

Discusses the role of the groups in encouraging rural women to become active in village affairs and benefits for the poorest. Examines the groups' financial management and financial performance. Considers implications for Indian microfinance and the global growth of the sector.




Sustainability of Microfinance Self Help Groups in India


Book Description

The major form of microfinance in India is that based on women's Self Help Groups (SHGs), which are small groups of 10--20 members. These groups collect savings from their members and provide loans to them. However, unlike most accumulating savings and credit associations (ASCAs) found in several countries, these groups also obtain loans from banks and on-lend them to their members. By 2003, over 700,000 groups had obtained over Rs.20 billion (US$425 million) in loans from banks benefiting more than 10 million people. Delinquencies on these loans are reported to be less than 5 percent. Savings in these groups is estimated to be at least Rs.8 billion (US$170 million). Despite these considerable achievements, sustainability of the SHGs has been suspect because several essential services required by the SHGs are provided free or at a significantly subsidized cost by organizations that have developed these groups. A few promoter organizations have, however, developed federations of SHGs that provide these services and others that SHG members need, but which SHGs cannot feasibly provide. Using a case study approach, Nair explores the merits and constraints of federating. Three SHG federations that provide a wide range of services are studied. The findings suggest that federations could help SHGs become institutionally and financially sustainable because they provide the economies of scale that reduce transaction costs and make the provision of these services viable. But their sustainability is constrained by several factors--both internal, related to the federations themselves, and external, related to the other stakeholders. The author concludes by recommending some actions to address these constraints. This paper--a product of the Finance and Private Sector Development Unit, South Asia Region--is part of a larger effort in the region to study access to finance in India.







Contemporary Research in Management


Book Description

This is an edited book that contains the chapters contributed by budding researchers. The works reported by these researchers are mostly outcome of their research dissertation submitted for award of higher research qualifications. Dynamics in the business environment warrants managers to be abreast of latest changes happening around it that has potential to impact the business. Some of the forces in the environment put detrimental impact where as others bring new opportunities. Being aware of these opportunities is essential to be competitive and develop sound strategy. Further being knowledgeable of potential threats in the environment allows taking proactive steps to mitigate the risks. Scanning the environment and collecting relevant information are important steps to understand the environment. Academic researches provide much needed information to industry through their research outputs. Though academic research is fundamental by nature, yet managers could get deep insights about changes happening in the business environment, expectations of consumers and stakeholders etc. This book presents compilation in form of chapters of some latest research conducted by young academic researchers in field of business and management studies. These researches can prove to be vital for practicing managers by simplifying decision making. The researches presented in this book are from diverse areas and cover wide range of contemporary issues. The book is intended to serve both academic as well as industrial application.




Microfinance Challenges


Book Description

Contributed papers presented earlier in a conference.




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.




The Indian Financial System: Markets, Institutions And Services, 2/E


Book Description

In fifteen years of reforms, the Indian financial system has metamorphosed into a substantive, competitive, market-oriented, modern and cost-effective twenty-first century system. This new edition, though fully revised and updated, preserves the strengths of the first edition while meeting the academic needs and aspiration of today's students and academicians. It has fuller treatment of the topics and, consequently, the size of the chapters has been enlarged to facilitate better understanding. Each chapter includes chapter objectives, boxes that discuss important concepts explored in detail, supp Paperbackortive up-to-date data, key terms, review exercises and chapter summary.




Financial Liberalization and Rural Credit in India


Book Description

Financial liberalization after 1991 damaged the formal system of institutional credit in rural India severely. It represented a clear and explicit reversal of the policy of social and development banking, and contributed in no small way to the extreme deprivation and distress of which the rural poor in India have been victims over the last decade. The papers in this volume, theoretical and empirical, examine the implications of financial liberalization with respect to rural credit. The theoretical papers deal with the macro-economic and structural effects of neo-liberal financial policy on the rural banking system. The empirical papers, both secondary data-based and village-level case studies, show that changes in national banking policy have had a rapid, drastic and potentially disastrous effect on the debt portfolios of rural households, particularly the income-poor. Although it is clear that chronic indebtedness among the rural poor is a problem that cannot be solved by banking policy alone, and that the abolition of usury requires agrarian reform and major public investment, a decisive change in banking policy is essential for the very survival of the working people in rural India.V.K. Ramachandran and Madhura Swaminathan are economists and Professors at the Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata.The strength of the book lies in its good analytical papers on policies and rich material from village studies.The Hindu