MICROCREDIT, MICROENTERPRISES AND SOCIAL WELFARE OF THE RURAL POOR IN NORTH-EASTERN TRINIDAD: AN EVALUATION OF

The study examined the relationship between microcredit, microenterprises, and the social welfare of the rural poor in north-eastern Trinidad. Guided by the main propositions of social capital theory, the researchers held 45 semi-structured interviews with active participants/clients within a case s...

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Main Authors: Talia Esnard-Flavius, Zainab Aziz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Sains Malaysia 2011-01-01
Series:Asian Academy of Management Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://web.usm.my/aamj/16.1.2011/AAMJ_16.1.5.pdf
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spelling doaj-920e1f0447244b778d960156dd3bc9372020-11-25T00:57:30ZengUniversiti Sains Malaysia Asian Academy of Management Journal1394-26031985-82802011-01-0116195118MICROCREDIT, MICROENTERPRISES AND SOCIAL WELFARE OF THE RURAL POOR IN NORTH-EASTERN TRINIDAD: AN EVALUATION OF Talia Esnard-FlaviusZainab AzizThe study examined the relationship between microcredit, microenterprises, and the social welfare of the rural poor in north-eastern Trinidad. Guided by the main propositions of social capital theory, the researchers held 45 semi-structured interviews with active participants/clients within a case study research design. The data showed that access to microcredit through Helping Others Prosper Economically (HOPE) positively affected their microenterprises and social welfare, though marginally. Findings also revealed that fragmented social relations within the network, conflict, distrust, and the loose structure of the program limited the impact of their access to microcredit on social welfare as well as the financial potential of the lending organisation, that is, HOPE. It is the contention of this paper, therefore, that such questionable social relations dynamics 'hijack' the promise of collective social networks as exercised through goodwill and resource building. Implications of this study and directions for future research are discussed.http://web.usm.my/aamj/16.1.2011/AAMJ_16.1.5.pdfmicrocreditmicroenterprisesocial welfareTrinidadsocial capital theory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Talia Esnard-Flavius
Zainab Aziz
spellingShingle Talia Esnard-Flavius
Zainab Aziz
MICROCREDIT, MICROENTERPRISES AND SOCIAL WELFARE OF THE RURAL POOR IN NORTH-EASTERN TRINIDAD: AN EVALUATION OF
Asian Academy of Management Journal
microcredit
microenterprise
social welfare
Trinidad
social capital theory
author_facet Talia Esnard-Flavius
Zainab Aziz
author_sort Talia Esnard-Flavius
title MICROCREDIT, MICROENTERPRISES AND SOCIAL WELFARE OF THE RURAL POOR IN NORTH-EASTERN TRINIDAD: AN EVALUATION OF
title_short MICROCREDIT, MICROENTERPRISES AND SOCIAL WELFARE OF THE RURAL POOR IN NORTH-EASTERN TRINIDAD: AN EVALUATION OF
title_full MICROCREDIT, MICROENTERPRISES AND SOCIAL WELFARE OF THE RURAL POOR IN NORTH-EASTERN TRINIDAD: AN EVALUATION OF
title_fullStr MICROCREDIT, MICROENTERPRISES AND SOCIAL WELFARE OF THE RURAL POOR IN NORTH-EASTERN TRINIDAD: AN EVALUATION OF
title_full_unstemmed MICROCREDIT, MICROENTERPRISES AND SOCIAL WELFARE OF THE RURAL POOR IN NORTH-EASTERN TRINIDAD: AN EVALUATION OF
title_sort microcredit, microenterprises and social welfare of the rural poor in north-eastern trinidad: an evaluation of
publisher Universiti Sains Malaysia
series Asian Academy of Management Journal
issn 1394-2603
1985-8280
publishDate 2011-01-01
description The study examined the relationship between microcredit, microenterprises, and the social welfare of the rural poor in north-eastern Trinidad. Guided by the main propositions of social capital theory, the researchers held 45 semi-structured interviews with active participants/clients within a case study research design. The data showed that access to microcredit through Helping Others Prosper Economically (HOPE) positively affected their microenterprises and social welfare, though marginally. Findings also revealed that fragmented social relations within the network, conflict, distrust, and the loose structure of the program limited the impact of their access to microcredit on social welfare as well as the financial potential of the lending organisation, that is, HOPE. It is the contention of this paper, therefore, that such questionable social relations dynamics 'hijack' the promise of collective social networks as exercised through goodwill and resource building. Implications of this study and directions for future research are discussed.
topic microcredit
microenterprise
social welfare
Trinidad
social capital theory
url http://web.usm.my/aamj/16.1.2011/AAMJ_16.1.5.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT taliaesnardflavius microcreditmicroenterprisesandsocialwelfareoftheruralpoorinnortheasterntrinidadanevaluationof
AT zainabaziz microcreditmicroenterprisesandsocialwelfareoftheruralpoorinnortheasterntrinidadanevaluationof
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