Papers
Village
Savings and Loan Associations in Zanzibar
In the last few years, there has been renewed interest in
searching for financial models that can be used to deliver
sustainable financial services to the rural poor in Africa.
One model that claims to be able to provide sustainable
financial services to the rural poor is the Village Savings
and Loan Associations (VSLA) model.
This report examines the performance of VSLA groups in
Zanzibar after several years of operations independent of
CARE. More specifically it examines the outreach of the
programme including reaching poorer members of the
community, its ability to provide useful services and
produce change in the lives of users.
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One Step
Beyond: Achievements and Challenges in Reaching Remoter
Areas
This paper reviews six organisations in Kenya in order to
establish how far they are reaching both in terms of
geography and poverty. It postulates the existence of a
‘frontier’ of provision for centralised models and discusses
strategies for extending outreach. In particular the paper
suggests that de-centralised models have potential to
provide services to poorer people and in remoter areas if
improvements in their operation can be brought about at a
price poor people can afford.
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One Step Beyond:
Challenges and Opportunities in Promoting Quality Financial
Services in Remoter Areas
This
paper examines the challenges and trade-offs for
organisations seeking to provide financial services to more
remote communities. It examines the depth of outreach of a
variety of delivery models and reviews the relative
sustainability, cost-effectiveness and security of each.
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‘Institutionalising
Suspicion’: Investigating the role of social and cultural
norms in the governance and management of user-owned
microfinance systems
The Decentralised Financial Services project is testing
tools with which to improve the management and governance of
community owned and managed microfinance organisations.
However, many of the problems that organisations such as
ROSCAs, ASCAs, and Saving and Credit Co-operatives face are
related to the operation of power and socio-cultural norms
within their local environment. In such circumstances,
training members on their rights and responsibilities does
not necessarily produce the anticipated results. This paper
investigates the wider socio-economic, cultural and
political context in order to consider how constraints to
such ineffectiveness can be addressed and incorporated into
the tools being tested.
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