This paper describes important trade-offs that microfinance practitioners, donors, and regulators navigate. Drawing evidence from large, global surveys of microfinance institutions, the authors find a basic tension between meeting social goals and maximizing financial performance. For example, non-profit microfinance institutions make far smaller loans on average and serve more women as a fraction of customers than do commercialized microfinance banks, but their costs per dollar lent are also much higher. Potential trade-offs therefore arise when selecting contracting mechanisms, level of commercialization, rigor of regulation, and the extent of competition. Meaningful interventions in microfinance will require making deliberate choices - a...
In recent years there is increasing appetite for regulation of financial institutions after the 2008...
Microfinance is arguably one of the most effective techniques for poverty alleviation in developing ...
Policy advocates argue the case for the transformation of non-government Microfinance Organizations ...
Microfinance institutions have proved the possibility of providing reliable banking services to poor...
This meta-analysis reviews existing evidence on the ability of microfinance institutions (MFI) to ac...
The limited number of existing papers that link competition among microfinance institutions (MFIs) a...
Microfinance has been recognized as an effective tool in helping poor people and developing rural ec...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Market segmentation characterized by price heterogeneity appears as a failure of classical view of m...
We combine two datasets to examine whether the scale of an economy's banking system affects the prof...
While the theoretical literature has found that intense competition leads to the poorest borrowers d...
In this paper, we examine the economic logic behind microfinance institutions and consider the movem...
This paper examines the main risk management opportunities and threats, which microfinance instituti...
Suppliers of microfinance are typically Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs), cooperatives or speci...
Microfinance institutions (MFIs) aim to increase the standard of living in poor communities through ...
In recent years there is increasing appetite for regulation of financial institutions after the 2008...
Microfinance is arguably one of the most effective techniques for poverty alleviation in developing ...
Policy advocates argue the case for the transformation of non-government Microfinance Organizations ...
Microfinance institutions have proved the possibility of providing reliable banking services to poor...
This meta-analysis reviews existing evidence on the ability of microfinance institutions (MFI) to ac...
The limited number of existing papers that link competition among microfinance institutions (MFIs) a...
Microfinance has been recognized as an effective tool in helping poor people and developing rural ec...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Market segmentation characterized by price heterogeneity appears as a failure of classical view of m...
We combine two datasets to examine whether the scale of an economy's banking system affects the prof...
While the theoretical literature has found that intense competition leads to the poorest borrowers d...
In this paper, we examine the economic logic behind microfinance institutions and consider the movem...
This paper examines the main risk management opportunities and threats, which microfinance instituti...
Suppliers of microfinance are typically Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs), cooperatives or speci...
Microfinance institutions (MFIs) aim to increase the standard of living in poor communities through ...
In recent years there is increasing appetite for regulation of financial institutions after the 2008...
Microfinance is arguably one of the most effective techniques for poverty alleviation in developing ...
Policy advocates argue the case for the transformation of non-government Microfinance Organizations ...