Poverty reduction has become the central goal of development policies over the last decade but there is a growing realization that the poorest people rarely benefit from poverty reduction programmes. Microfinance programmes can help poor people improve their lives but generally such programmes do not reach the extremely poor and the chronic poor: casual labourers in remote rural areas, ethnic and indigenous minorities, older people, widows, migrants, bonded labourers and others.To counter this, governments, NGOs and donors have started to mount programmes explicitly targeting the poorest. This book is the first attempt to examine such initiatives and identify ‘what works for the poorest’. It asks the questions: what are the characteristics ...
An initiative in Bangladesh, led by the international non-governmental organisation BRAC, to provide...
The Extreme Poverty Research Group (EPRG) develops and disseminates knowledge about the nature of ex...
Extreme poverty is an immense political and market failure, wasting the potential of hundreds of mil...
The existence of extreme poverty in several developing countries is a critical challenge that needs ...
Microfinance is a successful financial innovation to help the poor to sort out credit exclusion, whi...
Who are the ultra-poor and how can development policy address their particular needs? In today’s blo...
This paper is about microfinance and its contribution to the eradication of poverty for millions of ...
Although the world witnessed an unprecedented pace of poverty reduction over the last decades, reduc...
This paper describes BRAC experiences of working with the ultra-poor over the last two decades. The ...
One of the global problems of mankind for many years is the problem of poverty. Despite the efforts ...
A household survey of a randomized control trial in rural Bangladesh conducted in 2014 which collect...
Very poor people are often considered ignorant and even incapable of thinking, because they have had...
Poverty has long been a developmental challenge in the Global South in general and in sub-Saharan Af...
What Happened to the Poorest? CGAP, the international microfinance consortium, started off its life ...
It has been estimated that over 700 million of the world's poor live in Asia-Pacifiui region i.e., t...
An initiative in Bangladesh, led by the international non-governmental organisation BRAC, to provide...
The Extreme Poverty Research Group (EPRG) develops and disseminates knowledge about the nature of ex...
Extreme poverty is an immense political and market failure, wasting the potential of hundreds of mil...
The existence of extreme poverty in several developing countries is a critical challenge that needs ...
Microfinance is a successful financial innovation to help the poor to sort out credit exclusion, whi...
Who are the ultra-poor and how can development policy address their particular needs? In today’s blo...
This paper is about microfinance and its contribution to the eradication of poverty for millions of ...
Although the world witnessed an unprecedented pace of poverty reduction over the last decades, reduc...
This paper describes BRAC experiences of working with the ultra-poor over the last two decades. The ...
One of the global problems of mankind for many years is the problem of poverty. Despite the efforts ...
A household survey of a randomized control trial in rural Bangladesh conducted in 2014 which collect...
Very poor people are often considered ignorant and even incapable of thinking, because they have had...
Poverty has long been a developmental challenge in the Global South in general and in sub-Saharan Af...
What Happened to the Poorest? CGAP, the international microfinance consortium, started off its life ...
It has been estimated that over 700 million of the world's poor live in Asia-Pacifiui region i.e., t...
An initiative in Bangladesh, led by the international non-governmental organisation BRAC, to provide...
The Extreme Poverty Research Group (EPRG) develops and disseminates knowledge about the nature of ex...
Extreme poverty is an immense political and market failure, wasting the potential of hundreds of mil...