“Does Microcredit Really Help Poor People?” Yes, but…

22 January 2010 at 05:14 4 comments

KF9  Ilmari Soininen    UIMCEC,     Thies, Senegal

Over the last four months working in microfinance in urban Senegal, I have come across many clients who report increased income thanks to their loans. Fishmongers, clothing salesman, taxi drivers, you name it. Indeed, this has come to be expected – put the capital into the entrepreneur’s hands and he will surely put it to the most efficient use, and help bring his family out of poverty.

 Makes sense. But trying to tease out exactly by how much the client’s income has increased is not as straight forward. Clients rarely keep good track of revenues and expenses, so the bottom line at the end of the month can be pretty hard to decipher. Often I wonder after the interest payments, did the client really increase his income or was it a mirage simply reflecting more money coming in and out?

 My experience is consistent with the broader lack of evidence to link microfinance with increased incomes and reduced levels of poverty. In “Does Microcredit Really Help Poor People?”, an excellent recent report for CGAP, Richard Rosenberg examines recent research and looks to answer this question.

 The trouble with discerning the real impact of microloans is that there are a multitude of other factors at play. Often entrepreneurs who seek out micro-financing are savvier than their counterparts, so any positive outcomes could not be attributed solely to access to financing. However, randomized controlled trials (RCTs) allow researchers to more accurately look at the direct effects by comparing two groups which are statistically identical. Several RCTs examining clients in India and the Philippines found no effects on income and consumption levels in the 12 – 18 month time frames measured (see the article from the Economist for a good summary of the findings).

 But, as Rosenberg suggests, perhaps we are aiming at the wrong target. As he points out, those who live on $2 per day, don’t earn exactly $2.00 each day. There is often extreme volatility in income, and microfinance can play a very useful role in smoothing consumption, especially for emergencies. In other words, microfinance can not always change the level of income, but it can change its’ structure. These benefits are not always appreciated. I would further add that the organic development of microfinance institutions is in itself highly valuable. UIMCEC, for instance, has grown not by a push from donors to expand, but by a demand from clients for more branches. As Rosenberg puts it, people have voted with their feet. In countries with weak public institutions, the MFIs are often the only formal institution people trust.

Understanding these more subtle effects of microfinance can make it seem less shiny, less sexy. But poverty is itself complex, multi-faceted and deeply opaque. A blind faith in the effectiveness of microfinance will not serve us well. I urge you to read Rosenberg’s very accessible article for yourself. If you want to delve deeper, read the RCT studies. Step back, and think about it for yourself. Then make a loan with a better understanding of how microfinance  WORKS.

Entry filed under: KF9 (Kiva Fellows 9th Class), Senegal. Tags: , , .

Bienvenido a Chile, Kiva! Microfinance: One industry, multiple methods

4 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Qazi Nazrul Huque  |  11 December 2010 at 21:05

    Microcredit is pure banking. Under conventional banking loans are given to those who are in less need for loans (i.e. the rich), while under micro lending loans are given to the most needy. The difference is only in procedures (collateral and non-collateral, individual and collective responsibility etc.). If the rich can benefit from bank loans then why can’t the poor while the processes of investment and income are same for both in a market economy? In fact, by microcredit Professor Yunus has put the banking system – which was so far standing on its head – on its very foot by ensuring bank loans for the poor who are majority of the population and who need loans more than the rich.

    Reply
  • 2. Josh Weinstein  |  24 January 2010 at 17:34

    great post – I enjoy the posts about the impacts of microfinance. I think you are right on about microfinance as a means of smoothing consumption. the question that is troubling to me is whether microfinance has a sustainable or meaningful impact above the individual level (community, town, country). For a lot of reasons the answer is yes, I think, but that always seems to be a major criticism.

    Reply
  • 3. thamson  |  22 January 2010 at 20:23

    u have any idea to lend at pondicherry in south india i am happy to see your activities i am proud to keep hands and i am also interested to do in my place any government restriction is there

    Reply
  • 4. Cynthia  |  22 January 2010 at 14:01

    Great post, Ilmari. Another good source for RCTs evaluating the impact of microfinance: http://poverty-action.org/

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


Get Involved!

Learn more about this blog and about Kiva Fellows

Visit Kiva.org

Apply to be a Kiva Fellow

Enter your email address to receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 315 other followers

Archives

Drawing from the Field

Kiva Blog Policy


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 315 other followers