The long term impact of microfinance on income, wages and the sectoral distribution of economic activity
This paper analyses the long-term effects of improved small-scale lending, often provided by microfinance institutions set up with the support of development aid. The analysis shows that some common assumptions about microfinance are not true at all: First, it shows that the impact on income will accrue not to the microenterprises themselves, but rather to the consumers of their products. Second, microfinance will have a significant positive effect on the wage levels of employees in the informal sector. Third, microfinance will cause high growth rates in the informal production sector, whereas the trade sector will either contract or at best grow very little.
Management of financial services: stock exchange and bank management science (including saving banks) ; Poverty Alleviation and Microfinance ; Individual Working Papers, Preprints ; Germany. General Resources