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Economics focus
A partial marvel
Jul 16th 2009
From The Economist print edition
Microcredit may not work wonders but it does help the entrepreneurial poor

Illustration by Jac Depczyk
MICROCREDIT looks like a miracle. It involves providing unsecured small loans to poor people in developing countries whom most banks would turn away. Yet these small borrowers almost always repay their loans (and the fairly steep interest charges) on time, which suggests that they find productive uses for the money. The industry's backers make some big claims as a result: Mohammad Yunus, the founder of Grameen Bank in Bangladesh and the father of microfinance, reckons that 5% of Grameen Bank's clients exit poverty each year. Yet economists point out that there are surprisingly few credible estimates of the extent to which microcredit actually reduces poverty.

This would not matter too much if all microfinance funding were raised via the market (as an increasing proportion is). As long as investors were satisfied with their returns, there would be no cause for concern. Yet despite growing interest from private investors, 53% of the $11.7 billion that was committed to the microfinance industry in 2008 still came at below-market rates from aid agencies, multilateral banks and other donors. Given that there are other things that aid money could be spent on, and that the rationale for subsidising microcredit is its effectiveness as an anti-poverty tool, it is important for donors to know whether it has the advertised effects.

Measuring the impact of microcredit is complicated by the fact that the counterfactual—what would have happened to a person who borrowed from a microlender if he had not done so—cannot easily be tested. Many early studies compared borrowers with non-borrowers. But if borrowers are in any case more entrepreneurial than those who do not borrow, such comparisons are likely to overstate hugely the effect of microcredit.

Worries of this nature are not mere nitpicking. One study surveyed 1,800 families in rural Bangladesh and found that an impressive 62% of school-age sons of those who borrowed from Grameen Bank were in school, compared with 34% of the sons of non-borrowers. Advocates argued that this showed that microcredit helped increase school enrolment. But a comparison with people of similar backgrounds in villages without access to microcredit showed that the difference was because people who were already more likely to have children in school were also those who signed up for microcredit. Even comparisons between areas with and without microcredit may be misleading, because microlenders naturally choose to work in areas where their prospects of success are the greatest.

The pervasiveness of these self-selection issues has led researchers to devise experiments that allow them to ensure that participation in a programme is determined essentially by chance. Two new papers* apply this idea to measure the effect of access to microcredit. Researchers from the Poverty Action Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) worked with an Indian microfinance firm to ensure that 52 randomly chosen slums in the city of Hyderabad were given access to microfinance, while 52 other slums, which were equally suitable and where the lender was also keen to expand, were denied it. This allowed the researchers to see clearly the effect of microcredit on an entire community. Dean Karlan of Yale University and Jonathan Zinman of Dartmouth College carried out a similar exercise in the Philippines, this time at the level of the individual borrower. They tweaked the credit-scoring software of a microfinance firm so that only a random subset of people with marginal credit histories were accepted as clients. These clients could then be compared with those who sought credit but were denied it.

Broadly speaking, neither study found that microcredit reduced poverty. There was no effect on average household consumption, at least within a year to 18 months of the experiment. The study in the Philippines also measured the probability of being under the poverty line and the quality of food that people ate, and again found no effects. Microcredit may not even be the most useful financial service for the majority of poor people. Only one in five loans in the Hyderabad study actually led to the creation of a new business. Providing people with safe places to store their (small) savings may help them more in the long run.
Small and perfectly formed?

That said, microcredit did have discernible effects. In India, people in the slums that had access to microcredit were more likely to cut down on things like tobacco and alcohol in favour of durable goods (particularly items such as pushcarts or cooking pans that are used heavily by traders and food-stall owners). One reason average consumption failed to increase may therefore be that more people were diverting some of their own income into starting or expanding their businesses. Microcredit clearly allowed more people to overcome the barrier posed by start-up costs. The MIT researchers found that as many as one-third more businesses had opened in slums which had a microcredit branch. This may mean that even though there was no measurable impact on poverty during the study period, there may well be some over a longer time-frame as these
businesses prosper.

Tiny loans are unlikely to be enough to allow these businesses to grow to an efficient scale, of course. But the role of microcredit in allowing people to signal their creditworthiness is valuable, especially if their success makes banks more willing to lend them larger sums and leads to even more economic activity. By being willing to take a risk on entrepreneurial sorts who lack any other way to start a business, microcredit may help reduce poverty in the long run, even if its short-run effects are negligible.
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# Posté le jeudi 15 octobre 2009 10:34

1an

Et voila, 1 an est passé.. .
Bilan?
Beaucoup de changement.
Des regrets?
Aucun.
Des sourires?
Tout pleins ^^

En repassant doucement,
Cette année au ralenti.
Je me rend compte que
Même dans une ville moche,
La beauté est présente, si si sa existe.

J'évolue au fil de mes idées et
Mes idées évoluent au fil de ma vie;
Nouvelles rencontres, vie, délire,réflexions.

Ma vie s'articule comme une longue marche,
Où j'arrive de plus en plus à choisir où mettre mes pas.
Alors je vais continuer d'avancer;
Chapeau en tête,
Sourire aux lèvres
Sur mon chemin. . .

Faites de mêmes!!

# Posté le dimanche 24 mai 2009 17:19

Dad? what that? A demon?

Hurler à ton visage,
Je ne peux me le permettre
Car je suis chez toi.

Mais tinkiete, je te laisserai bientot
Dans ta paisible et misérable vie
Avec cette femme qui n'aime pas la mienne.

Mais tinkiete, je graverai au couteau, sur la porte de ma maison
Freedom =/= Dad
Parce que tu ne me laisse pas vivre.

Comprendre que je suis libre
Libre de faire ma vie
Alors ne l'influence pas

A bientot quand tu auras compris,
Que ta vie n'est pas la mienne et
JE NE TE PERMETTRAI JAMAIS DE ME JUGER ! ! !
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# Posté le mardi 10 mars 2009 15:03

Et wai la vie en communauté c'est chaud....

Marre de ce manque de savoir vivre
Marre de supporter cette saleté,
ce non rangement, et ce je m'en foutisme...

Si seulement il était seul chez lui,
Mais non il ne comprend pas
Ici c'est une COMMUNAUTE, une FAMILLE....
Y a des règles à respecter !

Laisser un amas de cheveux,
Sa le fait pas
Laisser les taches et crasses de partout
Sa le fais pas non plus.

On a beau le dire, le redire,
Sa impregne toujours pas...
Esperons que les mots suffiront...

C'est une personne super mais
Vivre dans le même endroit que lui
Devient de plus en plus insuportable!
Marre d'aller la bas, de me dire que je vais cotoyer ça.
En fermant ma gueule pour la pluspart du temps...

Si seulement cette personne
N'était pas mon grand frère
Et que ce lieu
Ne serait pas chez moi ....

Regrets ...

# Posté le jeudi 22 janvier 2009 16:04

Putain si j'ai pas mes partielles!

Machine s'allumant au petit matin
Un peu d'eau pour faire marché la batterie
Et c'est parti....

De 10h à 10h, elle travail
Lit, Comprend, Apprend
Sans s'arrêter, elle ruine ses neurones

Fin de journée, zombie
Lecture d'un autre monde
Coucher tard dans la nuit

Et la machine recommence sa journée
Une machine à apprendre
A qui on ne demande de faire que sa

Si seulement je n'étais qu'une machine.....
Mais je suis humain!

Envie d'aller sentir le bois mort dehors,
De jouer dans la neige
De boire des cannons
De faire l'amour
De parler..........

Putain si j'ai pas mes partielles!

# Posté le mercredi 07 janvier 2009 05:25