Women and microcredit in rural agrarian households of Uganda: match or mismatch between lender and borrower?

Type Journal Article - Applied Studies in Agribusiness and Commerce
Title Women and microcredit in rural agrarian households of Uganda: match or mismatch between lender and borrower?
Author(s)
Volume 10
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2016
Page numbers 77-88
URL http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/bitstream/250222/2/Apstract_2016_vol10_2-3_09.pdf
Abstract
The alignment of microfinance programs with the context and expectations of the recipients is critical for ensuring clients’ satisfaction
and desired program outcomes. This study sought to investigate the extent to which the objectives and design of the BRAC microfinance
program match the expectations, context and characteristics of female borrowers in a rural agrarian setting in Uganda. Quantitative and
qualitative methods were used to obtain socio-demographic, personality and microenterprise (ME) characteristics of existing borrowers,
incoming borrowers and non-borrowers and to obtain information about the microcredit program. We found that BRAC uses a modified
Grameen group-lending model to provide small, high-interest rate production loans and follows a rigorous loan processing and recovery
procedure. BRAC clients are mainly poor subsistence farmers who derive income from diverse farming and non-farm activities. The major
objective to borrow is to meet lump-sum monetary needs usually for school fees and for investment in informal small non-farm businesses.
Many borrowers use diverse sources of funds to meet repayment obligations. Defaulting on loans is quite low. The stress caused by weekly
loan repayment and resolution of lump-sum cash needs were identified as reasons for women to stop borrowing. The limited loan amounts,
the diversions of loans to non-production activities, the stages of the businesses and the weekly recovery program without a grace period may
limit the contribution of these loans to ME expansion and increase in income.

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