Poverty has become the primary concern of developing countries during the last decade. Unsustainable external deficits constrained most of these countries to enter into a painful structural adjustment process in the late 1980s.
Macroeconomic policies linked to structural adjustment processes, although subsequently oriented in ways that tended to limit or minimize social problems, could
hardly bring about a lasting solution. Such policies support the traditional approach, in which poverty is deemed to be alleviated by top-down money transfers
initiated by the State in the direction of the poor. Yet public money transferred to the poor can provide only short-term relief to their situation simply because nowhere is public (or donor) money in infinite supply.
The new bottom-up approach broadened the scope of anti-poverty policies and gave a special role to credit in the overall poverty-eradication process. Credit to
finance private income-generating activities undertaken by the poor became an unlikely new tool in the fight against poverty in parallel to the traditional transfers of public funds.
The book provides a general overview of the scope and limits of the role
of microfinance in policies aimed at poverty eradication.
Table of Contents
1: Anti-Poverty Strategies: Scope and Limits of Credit
- An Operational Approach Defining Poverty
- Using credit to Generate Income
- Expanding the Role of Credit to Finance Basic Need
- Limits of Credit as an Instrument for Poverty Eradication
- Broadening the Perspective: From Credit to Microfinance
2: Financial Intermediation at the Local Level
- Financial Intermediation in Developing Economies
- Specificity of Local Financial Intermediation
- Anti-Poverty Policies and Local financial Deepening
3: Local Financial Infrastructure
- Local Banks Branches
- Self-Help Groups Emergence of Group in Finance
- Microfinance and Local Infrastructure
4: Institutional Microfinance Strategies
- Microfinance at the Policy Level
- Taking a Network Approach at the Local Level
- Building the Capacity of the Local Financial Infrastructure
5: Microfinance Instruments
- Refinancing Facilities and Savings Mobilization Refinancing Credit Operations
- Guarantee Facilities and Equity Build-up
- Combining refinancing and guarantee facilities at second-tier institutions
- End-of-Project Situations
6: Conclusion
- The Challenges Ahead
- References
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