Impact of micro-credits on nutritional status of children in Malawi

Type Journal Article - International Journal of Small Business and Entreprenurship Research
Title Impact of micro-credits on nutritional status of children in Malawi
Author(s)
Volume 3
Issue 3
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
Page numbers 42-56
URL http://www.eajournals.org/wp-content/uploads/Impact-of-Micro-Credits-on-Nutritional-Status-of-Childr​en-in-Malawi.pdf
Abstract
Almost 20 years have passed since micro-credit programs have been introduced in
Malawi. Various reports had been written, but almost none has analyzed the link between microcredit
and nutritional status of children. This paper, therefore, focused at investigating the role of
income obtained from micro-enterprises in improving nutritional status of children in Malawi. A
comprehensive cross-sectional study collected data on current levels of knowledge, attitude and
practice of health in the households, and measured levels of different health indices (anthropometry,
hematology, biochemistry, and parasitology) in the rural households in 2011/12. Based on recent
data, this research paper, however, focused on comparing micro-credit participants and nonparticipants
through investigating the impact of income obtained from micro-enterprises in improving
nutritional status of children in Malawi. Using stratified random sampling, a total of 630 under-five
children were identified from all 471 households. Of these, 251 households ran micro-enterprises
funded by rural lending institutions, and 220 did not run micro-enterprises; and 353 and 277 underfive
children were identified in the households, respectively. Children under the age of 5 years
constitute approximately 17.2% of the Malawian population (MDHS, 2010), and in this research
under-fives constitute 15% and 11.8% of the total 2350 persons in the 471 households surveyed with
and without microenterprises, respectively.Incomes obtained from micro-enterprises ran through
micro-credits had positive but not significant impact on nutritional status of under-five children
through additional expenditure on food items and/or medical provisions, other things being held
constant. Possibly, the positive implications were through increased total income of households with
micro-enterprises compared to those households without micro-enterprises, as well as, increased food
and non-food expenditures per month for those households with micro-enterprises. Neither children
from households with micro-enterprises nor children from households without micro-enterprises were
better off on measurements of children nutrition status. However, children in households with microenterprises
had significantly less sick days per month than those households without microenterprises.
The difference is attributed mostly due to the extra income that was obtained from the
micro-enterprises, and helped those households to buy medications for their children. Involvement of
women and men in owning and managing micro-enterprises funded by micro finance institutions has
positive effects on total household income, and on food and non-food expenditures. But,
anthropometric measurements have shown no significant differences in nutritional status of children
between rural households with and without micro-enterprises in Malawi. The continued lack of access
and inadequate credit (or micro-finance) for the resource poor rural households to run meaningful
business have hardly helped the household to abate the grinding poverty including malnutrition
among their children in Malawi.

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