Participation in microfinance based Self Help Groups in India: Who becomes a member and for how long?

INTRODUCTION:Microfinance is a widely promoted developmental initiative to provide poor women with affordable financial services for poverty alleviation. One popular adaption in South Asia is the Self-Help Group (SHG) model that India adopted in 2011 as part of a federal poverty alleviation program...

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Main Authors: Danish Ahmad, Itismita Mohanty, Laili Irani, Dileep Mavalankar, Theo Niyonsenga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237519
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spelling doaj-1a1f25b3c7414d8cba56be959d89a0552021-03-03T22:00:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01158e023751910.1371/journal.pone.0237519Participation in microfinance based Self Help Groups in India: Who becomes a member and for how long?Danish AhmadItismita MohantyLaili IraniDileep MavalankarTheo NiyonsengaINTRODUCTION:Microfinance is a widely promoted developmental initiative to provide poor women with affordable financial services for poverty alleviation. One popular adaption in South Asia is the Self-Help Group (SHG) model that India adopted in 2011 as part of a federal poverty alleviation program and as a secondary approach of integrating health literacy services for rural women. However, the evidence is limited on who joins and continues in SHG programs. This paper examines the determinants of membership and staying members (outcomes) in an integrated microfinance and health literacy program from one of India's poorest and most populated states, Uttar Pradesh across a range of explanatory variables related to economic, socio-demographic and area-level characteristics. METHOD:Using secondary survey data from the Uttar Pradesh Community Mobilization project comprising of 15,300 women from SHGs and Non-SHG households in rural India, we performed multivariate logistic and hurdle negative binomial regression analyses to model SHG membership and duration. RESULTS:While in general poor women are more likely to be SHG members based on an income threshold limit (government-sponsored BPL cards), women from poorest households are more likely to become members, but less likely to stay members, when further classified using asset-based wealth quintiles. Additionally, poorer households compared to the marginally poor are less likely to become SHG members when borrowing for any reason, including health reasons. Only women from moderately poor households are more likely to continue as members if borrowing for health and non-income-generating reasons. The study found that an increasing number of previous pregnancies is associated with a higher membership likelihood in contrast to another study from India reporting a negative association. CONCLUSION:The study supports the view that microfinance programs need to examine their inclusion and retention strategies in favour of poorest household using multidimensional indicators that can capture poverty in its myriad forms.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237519
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Danish Ahmad
Itismita Mohanty
Laili Irani
Dileep Mavalankar
Theo Niyonsenga
spellingShingle Danish Ahmad
Itismita Mohanty
Laili Irani
Dileep Mavalankar
Theo Niyonsenga
Participation in microfinance based Self Help Groups in India: Who becomes a member and for how long?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Danish Ahmad
Itismita Mohanty
Laili Irani
Dileep Mavalankar
Theo Niyonsenga
author_sort Danish Ahmad
title Participation in microfinance based Self Help Groups in India: Who becomes a member and for how long?
title_short Participation in microfinance based Self Help Groups in India: Who becomes a member and for how long?
title_full Participation in microfinance based Self Help Groups in India: Who becomes a member and for how long?
title_fullStr Participation in microfinance based Self Help Groups in India: Who becomes a member and for how long?
title_full_unstemmed Participation in microfinance based Self Help Groups in India: Who becomes a member and for how long?
title_sort participation in microfinance based self help groups in india: who becomes a member and for how long?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description INTRODUCTION:Microfinance is a widely promoted developmental initiative to provide poor women with affordable financial services for poverty alleviation. One popular adaption in South Asia is the Self-Help Group (SHG) model that India adopted in 2011 as part of a federal poverty alleviation program and as a secondary approach of integrating health literacy services for rural women. However, the evidence is limited on who joins and continues in SHG programs. This paper examines the determinants of membership and staying members (outcomes) in an integrated microfinance and health literacy program from one of India's poorest and most populated states, Uttar Pradesh across a range of explanatory variables related to economic, socio-demographic and area-level characteristics. METHOD:Using secondary survey data from the Uttar Pradesh Community Mobilization project comprising of 15,300 women from SHGs and Non-SHG households in rural India, we performed multivariate logistic and hurdle negative binomial regression analyses to model SHG membership and duration. RESULTS:While in general poor women are more likely to be SHG members based on an income threshold limit (government-sponsored BPL cards), women from poorest households are more likely to become members, but less likely to stay members, when further classified using asset-based wealth quintiles. Additionally, poorer households compared to the marginally poor are less likely to become SHG members when borrowing for any reason, including health reasons. Only women from moderately poor households are more likely to continue as members if borrowing for health and non-income-generating reasons. The study found that an increasing number of previous pregnancies is associated with a higher membership likelihood in contrast to another study from India reporting a negative association. CONCLUSION:The study supports the view that microfinance programs need to examine their inclusion and retention strategies in favour of poorest household using multidimensional indicators that can capture poverty in its myriad forms.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237519
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