Chapter 8
Chapter 8
Chapter 8
Chapter VIII
Poverty reduction programmes
Microfinance
Developing countries are generally marked by low levels of financial inter-
mediation. The fact that, as a rule, commercial banks find it unprofitable to
operate in remote rural areas has resulted in absence of a formal market for
lending and borrowing. Even where there are commercial banks, people living
in poverty are disadvantaged owing to their lack of assets needed for collateral
and good credit histories. Therefore, the poor and those living in remote areas
are forced to borrow from moneylenders who charge usurious interest rates.
The microcredit movement has sought to address the credit needs of people
living in poverty.1
The 2006 Global Microcredit Summit (Halifax, Nova Scotia) pledged to
provide microfinance to 175 million poor households by 2015. Governments
and development agencies support the expansion of microfinance institutions
which often specifically target women, who account for the vast majority of
clients. Traditional networks and peer reviews ensure creditworthiness and
loans are secured through joint liability. There are a range of models for micro-
finance institutions including non-governmental organizations, credit unions,
cooperatives, banks and non-bank financial institutions and Government or-
ganizations. In some cases, the institutional forms are hard to distinguish from
government banks operating microfinance services in collaboration with non-
governmental organizations or credit cooperatives.
There is a growing body of literature on microfinance and its impact on
poverty (see Chowdhury, 2009, for a brief survey). However, there are con-
1 The terms “microfinance” and “microcredit” are used interchangeably here. However, in
the literature, the term “microfinance” is employed in a broader sense to cover other finan-
cial services such as microsavings services and micro-insurance.
136 Rethinking Poverty
2 Roughly 81 per cent of the population of Bangladesh live below the $2-a-day poverty line.
The corresponding shares in Pakistan and Sri Lanka are about 70 and 40 per cent.
3 This does not mean, however, that they do not want to better themselves.
Poverty reduction programmes 137
issue of very high interest rates charged by most microcredit institutions; for
example, it was found that 350 leading microfinance institutions charged be-
tween 20 and 40 per cent per year, after taking inflation into account (Mor-
duch, 2008).
Seasoned advocates of microfinance agree that microfinance alone can-
not eradicate poverty. For example, the Director of the Microcredit Summit
Campaign has written:
Microfinance is not the solution to global poverty, but neither is health,
or education, or economic growth. There is no one single solution to
global poverty. The solution must include a broad array of empower-
ing interventions and microfinance, when targeted to the very poor and
effectively run, is one powerful tool (Daley-Harris, Pollin and Mont-
gomery, 2007, p. 1).
In the words of microcredit pioneer and Nobel Laureate Professor Mohammed
Yunus (2003, p. 171):
Microcredit is not a miracle cure that can eliminate poverty in one fell
swoop. But it can end poverty for many and reduce its severity for others.
Combined with other innovative programmes that unleash people’s poten-
tial, microcredit is an essential tool in our search for a poverty-free world
(italics added).
Thus, there is broad agreement about the need to complement microfinance in
order to reduce poverty. Some microfinance institutions and non-governmental
organizations are therefore also offering training designed to build manage-
ment and entrepreneurial skills. Non-governmental organizations such as
BRAC in Bangladesh provide basic education in rural areas using innovative
methods. These are all potentially positive developments for poverty reduction
efforts.
Finally, microcredit-financed enterprises can best prosper in an expand-
ing economy. The potential for increased productivity will remain mostly
unrealized in the absence of demand-side factors. In other words, without a
supportive macroeconomic, trade and industry policy framework, microen-
terprises will remain very small, with few backward or forward linkages or
employment-creation possibilities.
There is, however, a growing consensus that microfinance can help people
living in poverty maintain their consumption level over periods of cyclical
downturns or unexpected crises. This positive role of microfinance should not
be dismissed altogether. If consumption or expenditure smoothing means that
parents can send their children to school, or buy essential medications, and
maintain the nutritional intake of their children, then microfinance is likely to
have positive long-term impacts on productivity and hence on poverty.
Microfinance thus fulfils an important safety-net task, especially in
countries where there is no State-sponsored social security system. During an
138 Rethinking Poverty
economy-wide crisis, people living in poverty are often forced to borrow from
moneylenders or the employer/landlord for whom they work. If microfinance
institutions extend lending to the very poor in these circumstances then they
can help break the power and hold of moneylenders and landlords. Unfor-
tunately, however, most microfinance institutions have been found wanting
when it comes to lending to the very poor. Nonetheless, it seems that micro-
finance has made a significant dent in the informal usurious credit markets
by undermining usury and debt bondage in some agrarian societies. Thus,
microfinance is having a modernizing impact, even if that impact is inadvert-
ent, unacknowledged and unsung.
There is also the learning-by-doing effect. The borrowers learn some basic
principles of business, and with luck—and perhaps some help—may be able to
become more viable and even expand. Microfinance also gives the unemployed
and people living in poverty some opportunities, hope and self-esteem.
In promoting microfinance, policymakers must not ignore the needs of
microenterprises in the informal economy. The owner-operators of these mi-
croenterprises have already proved their entrepreneurial acumen, but face nu-
merous constraints ranging from inability to access the formal credit market to
difficulties in marketing their products. These enterprises should be supported
with easy access to credit and other financial services (for example, insurance).
Recognizing this, the United Nations (2006, p. 6) has advanced the idea
of “inclusive” finance as an integral part of financial sector development:
There needs to be a continuum of financial services available to households
as they increase their standards of living and for enterprises as they grow
into the business mainstream. This is a critical issue for the development
of financial sectors. It involves adequate financial services for small and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) often called the “missing middle”, as
well as the smallest microentrepreneurs.
Small and medium-sized enterprises have been disadvantaged by financial sec-
tor reforms during the past three decades, which have promoted profitable fi-
nancial institutions by eliminating specialized State-run financial institutions,
which catered to the needs of small and medium-sized enterprises and the
agricultural sector. As the United Nations (ibid., p. 7) notes: “Mainstream
for-profit financial institutions have largely ignored the lower segment of the
market. This includes SMEs, microentrepreneurs … Instead, these mainstream
institutions have sought mainly high-value clients.” These high-value clients
usually reside in urban areas, while the majority of poor people live in rural
areas in developing countries.
transfers are cash grants provided to poor and disadvantaged people on condi-
tion that they make specific commitments, such as sending their children to
school and having regular health check-ups. These transfers are therefore often
designed as a mix of cash transfers and service provision, emphasizing strong
linkages with the labour market and intra-household responsibilities.
In the developing world, conditional cash transfers were first introduced
in a few countries in Latin America and South Asia but are now becoming
increasingly widespread. An early, iconic conditional cash transfer scheme,
Progresa, in Mexico, began in 1997 with 300,000 households and its successor,
Oportunidades, now reaches 5 million households. In Brazil, the Bolsa Familia
programme began in the mid-1990s as an experiment in two municipalities
and currently covers 11 million families. In Colombia, the initial target of the
Familias programme had been 400,000 families, but it had expanded to cover
1.5 million households by 2007. Smaller programmes in poorer countries such
as Kenya and Bangladesh cover a few thousand families (World Bank, 2009a).
Conditional cash transfers account for varying proportions of mean
household consumption, ranging from 20 per cent in Mexico to 4 per cent in
Honduras (World Bank, 2009a). Evaluations also show that conditional cash
transfers improve outcomes related to health, nutrition and education. The
impact of Progresa on education enrolment in Mexico has been significant (de
Brauw and Hoddinott, 2008). Even the short-lived Red de Protección Social
(RPS) in Nicaragua, in operation between 2000 and 2006, directed funds to
female household heads, significantly improving school enrolment and other
education indicators, and reduced stunting by an impressive five percentage
points in programme communities (Maluccio and Flores, 2005). Evaluations
of the cash-for-relief programme in Ethiopia, used to address crop failures,
found cash grants were used to pay off debts, restore land productivity and help
regenerate livelihoods (Standing, 2007).
As many evaluations have shown that conditional cash transfers increase
school enrolment, the issue of whether they also reduce child labour is highly
pertinent. This would be expected and, indeed, the experience of several pro-
grammes supports such an assumption. For example, Brazil’s Child Labour
Eradication Programme (PETI), which targets working children and insists
that a child stop working in order for the household to receive benefits, has
successfully achieved its objectives. In contrast, the incentive provided by a
cash transfer from Paraguay’s Tekoporã programme was not sufficient to re-
duce child labour and could even have stimulated it indirectly (Vera Soares,
Perez Ribas and Hirata, 2008). A possible reason for this seemingly paradoxi-
cal result is that when household income (in this case, the mother’s income)
increases, children may opt out of school to take on paid work. Household
utility may be further enhanced by the fact that children take on paid work.4
4 Some recent evaluations of conditional cash transfers (for example, that of Teixera (2008)
on Brazil’s conditional cash transfer programme Bolsa Familia) have examined their
140 Rethinking Poverty
incentive effects on labour supply, and found that cash transfers induced a reduction in
labour hours supplied. One problem with this kind of study is that it ignores the price ef-
fects of transfers. Cash transfers essentially reduce the cost of obtaining services, and thus
should lead to higher demand (for example, for children’s education) or usage of social
services (for example, health-care centres). Therefore, the net effect of cash transfers should
depend on the relative size of the price and income effects. More importantly, such find-
ings of adverse incentive effects (or negative income effects) on labour supply imply that
the poor are poor either because they are “lazy” (in other words, they prefer more leisure),
or because their expectations are “low” (in other words, they work for a low minimum
target income).
Poverty reduction programmes 141
are increasingly being offered to limit acute poverty and hardship in emer-
gency situations. These programmes are typically implemented together with
material-based (in kind) aid, such as food aid, but go beyond the immediate
consumption goals of commodity transfers to aim at enhancing livelihoods and
longer-term incomes. The cash-for-relief programme in Ethiopia, in response to
insufficient rainfall in 2002 and 2003, provided small cash grants over a period
of three to six months directly to the most vulnerable households. Evaluations
of this project found that the cash grants were successful in regenerating the
livelihoods of people living in affected communities; the grants had been used
not only for consumption, but also for reducing debts and improving land pro-
ductivity. The programme also restored basic infrastructure, thereby ensuring
the sustainability of the affected communities (Brandstetter, 2004). Similarly,
the emergency cash relief programme implemented in north-eastern Soma-
lia in 2003-2004 ensured rapid economic recovery for vulnerable households
(Standing, 2007). Another successful example is the pilot Kalomo social cash
transfer scheme initiated in two districts by the Government of Zambia. The
programme provided an unconditional and regular cash transfer, enabling ben-
eficiaries to develop a sense of autonomy in respect of how to spend the money.
In case of emergency, it is possible to institute universal cash transfer
schemes such as a basic income grant with no conditions. Critics of such pro-
grammes argue that a basic income grant reduces total employment in an
economy by reducing labour supply and the willingness to work by raising the
acceptable wage floor. However, in developing countries, the availability of
basic income grants may increase productivity and help smooth consumption.
For example, income grants reduce the need for workers to send remittances to
their families, thus increasing the wage available for their own consumption,
or for skills upgrading. This, in turn, could increase productivity through bet-
ter health and human resources outcomes. Higher productivity will increase
overall output and labour demand. If a basic income grant is successful in
boosting long-term growth, the fiscal burden of the transfer would be reduced.
The issue of whether a basic income grant can serve as a key intervention for
poverty reduction has been debated in the case of South Africa.
Supporters of targeted anti-poverty policies criticize calls for universal pro-
grammes, which they view as expensive and politically unrealistic. According
to them, taxpayers will oppose financing universal programmes. They also
argue that universal programmes provide the most benefits or services to the
middle class or those with low incomes who are best prepared to improve
themselves.
However, if the taxpayers are not willing to pay for universal social secu-
rity programmes, then why should people just above the poverty line, strug-
gling without benefit of health coverage, childcare or adequate unemployment
insurance, pay for programmes that go exclusively to people below the poverty
line? As a matter of fact, in developing countries, a large number of people—
either on or just above the poverty line—remain highly vulnerable to shocks to
Poverty reduction programmes 143
6 According to the World Bank (2009g), only one quarter of vulnerable developing coun-
tries are in a position to undertake significant counter-cyclical spending.
144 Rethinking Poverty
should set wages below the market wage rate, or even below the minimum
wage, to ensure self-selection by the poorest (Subbarao, 2003). In practice,
recruiting workers for programmes offering remuneration below the market
wage has been challenging. In many cases, wages are raised during implemen-
tation of the programme through workers’ collective bargaining (Adato and
Haddad, 2001; Subbarao, 2003). Moreover, paying less than the minimum
wage does not solve the problem of poverty, but simply swells the ranks of the
working poor.
However, research at the International Labour Organization (ILO) (Wray,
2007) has shown that more universal and permanent employment guarantee
schemes can be so designed as to sidestep the problems that beset existing
temporary and targeted programmes. For example, a universal employment
guarantee scheme can provide full-time work (and part-time work if desired)
with no time limits and pay a uniform wage to all workers.7 A minimum wage
becomes effective only in combination with a job guarantee. Therefore, the
wage paid by employment guarantee schemes can become the effective mini-
mum or social wage. Further, the package of benefits offered sets a standard,
which would normally be matched by other employers; this could include
health care, childcare, sick leave, vacations and social security contributions.
Finally, such programmes could be added to existing social protection
provisions to give workers who have lost their jobs more choices. Since formal
sector white-collar workers are unlikely to benefit from employment guar-
antee schemes targeted for people living in poverty, especially in rural areas,
State-owned enterprises can offer them temporary employment at a socially
acceptable minimum wage. By joining the programme, these workers can
maintain their self-esteem and skills, and avoid joining the ranks of the long-
term unemployed. Thus, when the economy recovers, their access to better jobs
becomes easier and the private sector has a pool of skilled workers ready for
employment, without having to pay for retraining. The public sector benefits
too, as workers bring in skills and experience from their earlier private sector
jobs. This kind of programme for formal sector workers can be funded by lev-
ies (like unemployment insurance contributions) payable during boom times.8
7 According to the World Bank (2009g), only one quarter of vulnerable developing coun-
tries are in a position to undertake significant counter-cyclical spending.
8 Hyman Minsky (1965; 1966; 1986) articulated such a proposal in the mid-1960s and the
mid-1980s.
Poverty reduction programmes 145
In India, for example, over 30 per cent of the landless and near landless live
in poverty, while in Bangladesh, they make up two thirds of people living in
poverty (Meinzen-Dick, Kameri-Mbote and Markelova, 2007). There are also
indications that landownership increases investment in the education of chil-
dren and hence can help reduce intergenerational poverty.
In rural communities, landownership and land rights are associated with
social standing in the community. The intra-household distribution of prop-
erty rights is also important, as it typically discriminates against women. In
many cases, women gain access to land only through the male members of the
household, and they are vulnerable to eviction or loss of land in case of the
man’s death, divorce or disinheritance. Landownership by women, on the other
hand, has contributed to their empowerment and to a decline in domestic vio-
lence (Panda and Agarwal, 2005; Bhatla, Chakraborty and Duvvury, 2006).
The links between poverty and lack of property often prompt calls for
land reforms, with transfers from large landlords to the landless. Such land
reform, however, requires commitment by the State to withstand resistance
from powerful landed owners.
Land can also be used as collateral for loans for investment, or sold to raise
capital for investment in an income generating activity. This has led to cam-
paigns—popularized by Hernando de Soto—to grant a title to land to urban
slum-dwellers who live on land not owned by them. According to de Soto, the
world’s poor are sitting on a huge amount of potential capital, but are hindered
by bureaucracies. For example, in Haiti, individuals must take 176 bureaucratic
steps over an average of 19 years to own land legally. Thus, de Soto (2000) has
argued that assigning property rights would give people living in poverty ac-
cess to credit, thereby ending the “capitalist apartheid” allegedly so prevalent
in the developing world. A number of countries in Latin America and Africa
have attempted, strongly aided by donors, to formalize land titles following de
Soto’s argument, despite the fact that de Soto has offered little real evidence
that formalizing property titles actually leads to greater credit access and thus
to poverty reduction in the developing world.
In Peru, where the Government and the Commission for Formalizing In-
formal Property, which de Soto helped create in 1996, formalized the property
of millions of rural and urban people, poverty levels have actually increased
over the past few years (Bourbeau, 2001). According to legal advocate Murtaza
Jaffer (quoted in Bourbeau, 2001, pp. 78-79): “Efforts to convey individual
titles to the poor in planned settlements have overestimated the ability of these
‘owners’ to find economic livelihood in the absence of additional support be-
yond allocation of land. The poor soon sell their interests, returning once more
to unplanned settlements and despair.”
In short, formalizing land titles suffers from impediments similar to those
experienced along the microfinance route to poverty reduction. In the absence
of an expanding economy, new landowners will not be able to expand their
146 Rethinking Poverty
capabilities. They often lack the education and entrepreneurial skills needed to
undertake business activities with borrowed money. They are risk-averse and
more worried about failing and hence losing their asset (land) used as collat-
eral. Poverty itself is a barrier to risk-taking and enterprise.
Furthermore, the campaign for formalizing land titles ignores the role
of culture and tradition, and assumes that with the same rights to property,
everyone will behave similarly in order to maximize utility or profit. However,
not everyone shares the same belief system, as has now become clear from
findings in the new field of behavioural economics. Many traditional societies
regard savings as a virtue, and borrowing as a manifestation of distress to be
avoided. In many Muslim countries, interest-based financing is being replaced
by financing based on profit-loss sharing. In such a system, there is no need for
collateral, as the financier becomes a co-owner of the business.
In many societies, there are other means of conferring property rights on
people living in poverty involving a mixture of legal systems, including statu-
tory law and customary mechanisms. In Africa, for example, over 90 per cent
of the rural population access land through customary mechanisms. In addi-
tion to customary law, property rights are influenced by a range of other legal,
cultural and normative frameworks, including religious laws and practices,
international treaties, and development project regulations. Which of these
frameworks are accepted and enforced depends on power and social relations
among different claimants. These complexities have not always been recog-
nized in programmes aimed at legally empowering the poor with land titles.
Statutory legal reforms should also take into account the secondary prop-
erty rights held by various claimants, such as the right to collect water, fire-
wood, fish or medicinal plants or grazing rights for their livestock. Loss of
these rights could seriously erode livelihoods, especially those of the poorest
(Frias, 2005; Wily, 2006). Many formal systems focus only on landownership,
thus excluding these secondary claims. Accordingly, the poor and marginal-
ized often depend more on customary or religious justifications for claiming
their rights to resources. Well-intentioned programmes designed to formally
clarify land rights for poor people may hurt their overall interests and thereby
fail to reduce poverty.
its goal of ensuring aid effectiveness. Thus, the dominant “good governance”
paradigm identifies a series of capabilities necessary for a market-friendly State.
These include capabilities to protect stable property rights, enforce the rule of
law, effectively implement anti-corruption policies and achieve government ac-
countability. Many of these capabilities are clearly desirable as ends in them-
selves; but in the good governance framework, these capabilities are identified as
preconditions for sustained growth, as they are supposed to ensure that markets
will be efficient and less subject to market failures. It is therefore argued that
good governance is a precondition for poverty reduction by ensuring sustained
growth. Additionally, “pro-poor” good governance reforms are supposed to en-
hance the scale and efficiency of service delivery to people living in poverty.
However, neither theory nor evidence strongly supports the plausibil-
ity of the view that governance reform significantly reduces poverty (Khan,
2009). The stabilization of property rights, the rule of law and the signifi-
cant reduction of corruption—that is, the achievement of good governance
goals—require fiscal capabilities not available in most developing countries.
As structural and fiscal constraints prevent significant improvements in gov-
ernance capabilities, market failures are likely to remain significant, and are
unlikely to be significantly reduced by governance reforms. Developing coun-
tries therefore need to focus on alternative governance capabilities, which can
enable them to directly address key market failures. Khan describes this as a
growth-enhancing governance agenda which focuses on developing govern-
ance capabilities appropriate for directly addressing a few key market failures.
Van Arkadie (2005) observes that the governance discourse is also con-
cerned with political agendas/objectives, entailing the incorporation of visions
of desirable political models. Good governance practice is sometimes justified
for the economic benefits it will generate, and at other times as a political end.
This creates no problems when arguments drawing on either of these perspec-
tives work in the same direction to generate sustained growth and poverty
reduction. However, the discussion becomes problematic when the evidence
suggests that politically desirable concepts of good governance are not a neces-
sary condition for fast economic growth or poverty reduction and may even
be inconsistent with them. In such cases, a choice may have to be made among
governance, growth and poverty reduction objectives. As pointed out by Van
Arkadie (2005, p. 222): “The fundamental difficulty … is to come to terms
with political and social realities as they exist, and to judge what is appropri-
ate and what is possible given those realities, rather than promoting images of
society largely based on an idealized interpretation (typically not very deep) of
OECD experience”.
Concluding remarks
Microfinance acts as an important safety net instrument and the microfinance
movement seems to have reduced the influence of informal moneylenders. Mi-
148 Rethinking Poverty
crofinance has also had wider social impacts, ranging from the empowerment
of women to the improvement in self-esteem of the poor and unemployed.
However, its overall poverty reduction effects remain doubtful in the absence
of other complementary factors, such as entrepreneurial skills and the growth
of overall demand in the economy.
The programme of formalizing land titles for urban slum-dwellers is a sim-
plistic poverty reduction tool for whose significant and lasting poverty reduc-
tion effect there is little evidence. As with microcredit programmes, the overall
effects of slum land titling on poverty reduction remain dubious without the
inclusion of appropriate complementary factors. If appropriate land titling pro-
grammes are part of redistributive land reforms aimed at reducing inequality,
especially in rural areas, they may be far more effective in poverty reduction,
as was the case for the agrarian reforms of East Asia in the 1950s.
Both microfinance and land titling focus on capital market imperfections,
while ignoring other market imperfections. They assume that people living
in poverty are all potential entrepreneurs, constrained only by their inability
to access credit. However, if most people are potentially entrepreneurial risk-
takers, when and where property rights are well guaranteed, then they will
not be constrained by lack of access to credit; one would then expect to find a
lack of people willing to work, as most people would want to start their own
businesses. In reality, close to 75 per cent of the working-age population in
developed countries are employees, not employers (entrepreneurs). The crea-
tion of stable and decent jobs through appropriate policies and institutional
support is far more likely to contribute to poverty reduction, as recognized by
the Millennium Development Goals.
Policymakers in the colonial past attributed poverty in part to behavioural
problems and cultural deficiencies that they hoped would be corrected by spe-
cial training and community action programmes for people living in poverty.
The welfare reform consensus of the mid-1980s converged on the notion that
mandated work and job training could best alleviate poverty. Neoliberals are
keen on making welfare contingent on work, and want to discipline welfare
clients, while liberal welfare reformers want to deliver more training, health
care and childcare to the underprivileged. However, almost everyone seems to
think that the best way to proceed is with programmes targeted at the poor.
Thus, there has been a proliferation of conditional cash transfer programmes
aimed at improving the education and health of the poor as well as temporary
employment guarantee schemes, especially for the rural poor.
Research, on the other hand, shows that universal social protection sys-
tems are much more effective in reducing vulnerability, and it is possible to
implement such systems in most developing countries with a modest increase
of budgetary resources. Within the universal social protection framework, em-
ployment guarantee schemes can be extended to cover other vulnerable people
in society, not just the poor and unemployed in rural areas. This is consistent
with the objective of full employment and decent work for all. By acting as a
Poverty reduction programmes 149