Actually How Empowering Is Microcredit?: Simeen Mahmud
Actually How Empowering Is Microcredit?: Simeen Mahmud
Simeen Mahmud
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
The author wishes to thank Prof. Naila Kabeer for her extremely thoughtful and detailed
comments, and an anonymous referee of this journal for very useful feedback on an earlier
draft.
Development and Change 34(4): 577–605 (2003). # Institute of Social Studies 2003. Published
by Blackwell Publishing, 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford OX4 2DQ, UK and 350 Main St.,
Malden, MA 02148, USA
578 Simeen Mahmud
1. The Bangladesh experience has been unique because it has been the ‘laboratory’ for some
of the most challenging and innovative development experiments in the contemporary
world. It has been varied because development interventions have ranged from vertical to
horizontal, conventional to radical, and imported to domestically evolved; and because
development actors have been many: the state, multilateral agencies, non-governmental
organizations and private entrepreneurs.
How Empowering is Microcredit? 579
One of the most visible recent changes in the lives of rural women in
Bangladesh is the significant increase in their access to credit. Loans are
provided to women by microcredit programmes of non-governmental organ-
izations (NGOs) and the Grameen Bank2 through informal groups mobil-
ized as part of a programme strategy to reach the poor.3 Although access to
credit and women’s empowerment are inextricably linked in much of the
international discourse on the impact of microcredit, within Bangladesh the
major policy thrust of microfinance institutions has not been women’s
empowerment but the broader macroeconomic imperative of employment
generation and poverty reduction. However, given the gender and class
2. By June 2001 such programmes covered 9.8 million women in rural areas. The expansion
in coverage has been increasing since the mid-1980s with the fastest growth occurring after
the mid-1990s (CDF, 2002). Membership in microcredit programmes is overwhelmingly
female (over 85 per cent) and programme inputs, particularly credit, are targeted to the
poorer segment of the population.
3. Group formation is organized initially around savings and awareness-raising activities.
Later, collateral-free credit is provided to group members for various income-generating
activities, undertaken either individually by households or, less frequently, by the group as
a whole. The collateral is in the form of peer monitoring by group members, which creates
a pressure to maintain loan repayment discipline.
580 Simeen Mahmud
Conceptual Frameworks
through higher returns. Thus, the assumption that simple access to credit
without significant or full control over loans improves women’s relative
position in the household is also quite plausible. The question also remains
whether ‘demonstrated capacity to invest loans profitably’ can be a realistic
definition of empowerment in the context of rural Bangladesh, where there
are significant barriers to the expansion of women’s productive investments
and women’s access to markets and public services is restricted (Hashemi
et al., 1996; Kabeer, 2001). In fact, capacity to invest loans actually represents
the different ways in which women respond to credit provision rather than
the impact of access to credit, and is determined very much by women’s
pre-existing capacities and the pre-existing situation of their households.
Measurement Indicators
7. One such trade-off is between the pressure to maintain the norms of purdah (seclusion)
that limit women’s access to markets and other public institutions and the need to
maintain control over the use of loans taken by them.
How Empowering is Microcredit? 585
8. It is recognized that resource access and control will both increase choice, but in different
ways and in different degrees.
How Empowering is Microcredit? 587
11. In this analysis purdah refers to the norms of women’s seclusion, which prescribe the
boundaries of women’s legitimate mobility into the public sphere comprising almost all
locations outside the homestead. Purdah is also commonly used to mean the actual veil or
covering some women use when moving in the public domain.
12. Husband’s approval of the use of modern birth control methods, although not essential,
reduces women’s ‘costs’ of using contraception to regulate fertility, especially in the case of
young women living in extended families.
590 Simeen Mahmud
birth control leads to improved survival prospects of children and better health
of women, contraceptive use also represents welfare augmenting behaviour.
Receiving treatment when ill and, in particular, receiving modern treatment
increases women’s absolute welfare, while immunization increases child welfare,
and consequently women’s welfare as well. Moreover, the sex ratios of pro-
portions of children immunized and proportions of household members
receiving any type of health care and modern health care when ill indicate
gender inequality in welfare. The variables used in the analysis to assess
empowerment at the different dimensions and their indicators are described in
Table 2.
Table 2. Variables
Dimension Variable Indicator
RESULTS
13. Within the public sphere male dominance is greater in the bank and the bazaar compared
to the health centre and NGO office.
How Empowering is Microcredit?
Table 3. Indicators of Socio-economic Status of Women Respondents (wife of household head or female head) and Sample
Households (averages and mean proportions)
Number of women/ Socio-economic status of women Socio-economic status of households
households
Age Prop. currently Parity Age of Prop. who Prop. head Prop. head Prop. head
(in years) married last child can read who can farmer manual
in months & write read & write labour selling
Programme Villages
Poor Households 1442
Participant 956 31.7* (8.01) 0.94 (.24) 3.3* (1.95) 29 (40.9) 0.18 (.38) 0.27 (.44) 0.15 (.36) 0.43 (.49)
Non-participant 486 29.5 (8.13) 0.92 (.27) 2.9 (2.04) 27 (34.6) 0.20 (.40) 0.29 (.45) 0.16 (.36) 0.41 (.49)
Non-poor 889
households
Participant 571 34.5* (8.54) 0.93 (.26) 3.8* (2.21) 35 (38.1) 0.35* (.48) 0.50* (.50) 0.58 (.49) 0.07 (.25)
Non-participant 318 32.9 (8.97) 0.92 (.29) 3.4 (2.23) 38 (73.5) 0.50 (.50) 0.59 (.49) 0.57 (.59) 0.06 (.23)
All households 2331 31.7 0.92 3.3 31 0.24 0.34 0.26 0.33
Non-programme Villages
All households 310 31.8 0.92 3.3 29 0.27 0.35 0.33 0.32
Notes:
Figures in brackets are standard deviations.
Means for all households in programme and control villages are weighted means.
*Significantly different from the mean value for non-participants in the same household category.
593
594
Table 4. Distribution of Women Respondents according to Formal Schooling, Paid Employment, Visit to Locations in the Public
Domain and Husband’s Approval of Family Planning (%)
Per cent of women respondents Husband approves
use of contraceptives
With Formal Schooling In Paid Employment Visited in the last year
Primary Secondary Wage Employed Self Employed Thana or Bazar NGO office/Health Centre
Programme Villages
Poor Households 2331 2331 1889 2331
Participant .14 (.35) .15 (.36) .06 (.24) .20* (.40) .09 (.29) .75* (.43) .75* (.44)
Non-participant .12 (.32) .15 (.36) .07 (.25) .13 (.34) .12 (.33) .27 (.45) .67 (.47)
Non-poor households
Participant .21 (.41) .33* (.47) .02 (.14) .07* (.25) .10 (.30) .71* (.45) .73 (.44)
Non-participant .20 (.40) .43 (.50) .02 (.13) .03 (.16) .10 (.30) .26 (.44) .66 (.47)
All households .15 .21 .05 .15 .10 .60 .72
Non-programme Villages 310 310 255 310
All households .16 .20 .07 .14 .09 .22 .66
Notes:
Figures in brackets are standard deviations.
Simeen Mahmud
Figures in bold are the number of valid cases.
Means for all households in programme and control villages are weighted means.
*Significantly different from the mean value for non-participants in the same household category.
How Empowering is Microcredit? 595
14. Access to income was determined on the basis of the variable ‘who kept cash income from
that source’ and the response was categorized as ‘both’ when income was shared equally
by the head and spouse, as ‘men’ when the male head and/or other male family members
kept more than 50 per cent, and as ‘women’ when the head’s wife or the female head and/
or other female family members kept more than one half of the income.
15. In each case the decision-maker was categorized as ‘men’ when the male head and/or male
family members were the primary decision-maker, as ‘both’ when the decision was made
jointly by the male head and spouse, and as ‘women’ when the primary decision-maker
was the head’s wife or female head and/or other female family members. Women were
reported as having no role in household decision-making when the primary decision-
maker was ‘men’ and to have an active role when the primary decision-maker was
‘both’ or ‘women’. Independent decision-making by women was not very common, seen
in 8 per cent or less of households in programme villages and in 13 per cent or less of
households in non-programme villages.
596 Simeen Mahmud
Notes:
Figures in brackets are standard deviations.
Figures in bold are the number of valid cases.
Means for all households in programme and control villages are weighted means.
*Significantly different from the mean value for non-participants in the same household category.
Notes:
Figures in brackets are standard deviations.
Figures in bold are the number of valid cases.
Means for all households in programme and control villages are weighted means.
*Significantly different from the mean value for non-participants in the same household category.
How Empowering is Microcredit? 597
Notes:
Figures in brackets are standard deviations.
Figures in bold are the number of valid cases.
Simeen Mahmud
Means for all households in programme and control villages are weighted means.
*Significantly different from the mean value for non-participants in the same household category.
How Empowering is Microcredit?
Table 6a. Distribution of Households according to Sick Family Members Receiving Treatment and Children Immunized by Sex (%)
Per cent of sick members Per cent of sick members Per cent of households
receiving modern treatment receiving any treatment with children under 7 immunized1
Notes:
Figures in brackets are standard deviations.
Figures in bold are the number of valid cases.
Means for all households in programme and control villages are weighted means.
1
Only DPT vaccination
*Significantly different from the mean value for non-participants in the same household category.
599
600 Simeen Mahmud
more likely to receive treatment than female family members when ill
(indicated by female/male ratios of less than 100). The male bias in receiving
treatment was slightly greater in poor households compared to non-poor
households; and in poor households the male bias was greater with respect
to modern treatment. This suggests that male bias in treatment is intensified
by household resource constraints, being greater in poor households and
with respect to costlier modern treatment.
In general, programme participation did not increase the likelihood of
receiving treatment when ill, except in non-poor households for male family
members receiving modern treatment. In poor households programme par-
ticipation was associated with higher female/male ratios or lower male bias
in the proportions receiving any treatment and modern treatment. The
likelihood of receiving treatment was generally lower for all family members
in non-programme villages compared to programme villages, while the male
bias in treatment received was also less pronounced.
The pattern of child immunization also varied more by sex of the child
than according to household economic status. There was a persistent small
male bias in the likelihood of children being immunized. This male bias was
slightly lower for programme participants in poor households, but could be
greater for participants in non-poor households. The overall extent of child
immunization, both girls and boys, was higher in programme villages com-
pared to non-programme villages, and the male bias was also lower.
DISCUSSION
16. Respondent’s age was, in any case, not strongly correlated to the indicators used in the
analysis.
How Empowering is Microcredit? 601
work, ability to visit the bank or bazaar and husband’s approval of family
planning. A positive effect of participation on the condition for empower-
ment is indicated if participants have greater access to those resources whose
access is influenced by participation, namely self employment and visit to
the NGO office or health centre.
In non-poor households women with less schooling were more likely to join
a programme, while in poor households women having husbands who
approved of family planning were more likely to join a programme. In non-
poor households this does not pose a problem for assessing the effect of
programme participation on empowerment because the bias will, if anything,
tend to depress the small improvement in the condition for empowerment
associated with participation. In poor households, the bias may exaggerate
improvement in the condition for empowerment associated with participa-
tion. However, because husband’s approval of family planning is a very
common experience (observed for more than two thirds of respondent
women) the magnitude of its effect on women’s agency and on welfare
outcomes is unlikely to be very differentiated by participation status.
On balance, women in poor and non-poor households had comparable
initial conditions for empowerment. The evidence shows that microcredit
programme participation expands women’s access to resources like self-
employment and mobility into certain public spaces, like the NGO office
and health centre. This is hardly surprising given that programmes require
visits to the NGO office, encourage women’s self-employment and often
motivate participants to avail themselves of public health services. The
positive effect of participation on the condition for empowerment is, how-
ever, small since women’s access to more remunerative wage employment
and mobility into the male dominated public sphere is not increased.
In general, women’s access to household income was negatively related to
the degree of male involvement in income earning and positively related to
household poverty status. A positive programme placement effect on women’s
access to female household income was evident. Programme participation was
associated with women’s increased access to male income in poor households,
and to both male and female incomes in non-poor households. Thus, partici-
pation effect on women’s access to household income was greater in situations
where women were traditionally less likely to have access to household income,
that is, in non-poor households and in the case of male incomes.
The pattern of women’s participation in household expenditure decision-
making was less consistent than the pattern of access to household incomes.
Poor women were more likely to have an active role in some decisions (food
expenditure) while non-poor women were more likely to have an active role
in other types of decisions (crop production expenditure). Programme par-
ticipation was associated with women’s active role in household decision-
making, particularly in poor households and primarily with respect
to decisions in the ‘female’ or common domains. Programme placement
had a generally positive association with women’s active involvement in
602 Simeen Mahmud
CONCLUSION
17. This research found that the household decision to join a programme is determined by the
interplay of the household’s demand for microcredit, the opportunity costs of membership
activities and the natures of intra-household gender relationships (Mahmud, 2000).
604 Simeen Mahmud
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