In this paper, we question the promotion of financial inclusion, and microfinance specifically, as a means to achieve ‘Decent Work’ (DW) under the International Labor Organization’s (ILO) programme. Drawing upon original research findings from two types of internal migrants in Cambodia, we make a twin contention: first, that excessive levels of microfinance borrowing by garment workers are part-outcome of the failings of the DW programme to engender ‘decent enough work’, and second, that microfinance borrowing is actually eroding rather than contributing to the prospect of decent work for debt-bonded brickmakers in the country. The data presented on two of the largest sectors contributing to Cambodia’s growth in recent decades, enable the p...
A major debate in microfinance focuses on the existence of a trade‐off between the financial sustain...
Migrant life has long required a careful balancing of responsibilities. Migrants travel to earn a wa...
Poverty exists in all countries, particularly in developing countries. Poverty has profound conseque...
In this paper, we question the promotion of financial inclusion, and microfinance specifically, as a...
This article analyses the effects of financial inclusion on poverty in terms of household income per...
The operations of microfinance are exalted in mainstream development thinking as a key means of supp...
This article examines the role of the International Labour Organization (ILO) in promoting ‘financia...
Over the past two decades, the migration of Cambodian workers has contributed to poverty reduction a...
This paper examines the effects of the imposition of an interest rate ceiling in the microfinance se...
Over the last decade, the expansion of microfinance institutions (MFIs) has dramatically shifted the...
Over-indebtedness is fuelling, not alleviating, the health poverty trap in Cambodia. It is associate...
The COVID-19 pandemic has hit at a time when microfinance is at its historical peak, with an estimat...
Microfinance is considered one of the effective tools in reducing poverty. In the last two decades, ...
Drawing on 203 quantitative surveys with women workers in Cambodia and a further set of semi-structu...
In the past few decades, micro-finance has been popular in developing countries, such as in Banglade...
A major debate in microfinance focuses on the existence of a trade‐off between the financial sustain...
Migrant life has long required a careful balancing of responsibilities. Migrants travel to earn a wa...
Poverty exists in all countries, particularly in developing countries. Poverty has profound conseque...
In this paper, we question the promotion of financial inclusion, and microfinance specifically, as a...
This article analyses the effects of financial inclusion on poverty in terms of household income per...
The operations of microfinance are exalted in mainstream development thinking as a key means of supp...
This article examines the role of the International Labour Organization (ILO) in promoting ‘financia...
Over the past two decades, the migration of Cambodian workers has contributed to poverty reduction a...
This paper examines the effects of the imposition of an interest rate ceiling in the microfinance se...
Over the last decade, the expansion of microfinance institutions (MFIs) has dramatically shifted the...
Over-indebtedness is fuelling, not alleviating, the health poverty trap in Cambodia. It is associate...
The COVID-19 pandemic has hit at a time when microfinance is at its historical peak, with an estimat...
Microfinance is considered one of the effective tools in reducing poverty. In the last two decades, ...
Drawing on 203 quantitative surveys with women workers in Cambodia and a further set of semi-structu...
In the past few decades, micro-finance has been popular in developing countries, such as in Banglade...
A major debate in microfinance focuses on the existence of a trade‐off between the financial sustain...
Migrant life has long required a careful balancing of responsibilities. Migrants travel to earn a wa...
Poverty exists in all countries, particularly in developing countries. Poverty has profound conseque...