Banking is for Others: Contradictions of Microfinance in the Ghanaian Market

Recent literature on microfinance has observed that commercial microfinance programs that achieve financial sustainability largely fail to reach the poor (Hulme 2000; Mayoux 2000; Cull, Demirgüç-Kunt, and Morduch 2007). Most studies rely on institutional explanations for this failure (Battilana and...

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Main Author: Irene Pang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2016-08-01
Series:Journal of World-Systems Research
Online Access:http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/640
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spelling doaj-a211051906fe48e4aa205400c279e59d2020-11-24T23:47:34ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghJournal of World-Systems Research1076-156X2016-08-0122251054110.5195/jwsr.2016.640632Banking is for Others: Contradictions of Microfinance in the Ghanaian MarketIrene Pang0Brown UniversityRecent literature on microfinance has observed that commercial microfinance programs that achieve financial sustainability largely fail to reach the poor (Hulme 2000; Mayoux 2000; Cull, Demirgüç-Kunt, and Morduch 2007). Most studies rely on institutional explanations for this failure (Battilana and Dorado 2010; Pache and Santos 2010; Canales 2011). Using a Braudelian conceptualization of a fragmented, three-tiered capitalist world-economy, this study examines how Ghanaian market women finance their businesses within the bottom layer of the capitalist world-economy, and why, despite the availability of commercial microfinance, they continue to rely on informal finance. I argue that commercial microfinance is structurally constrained by contradictions between the profit-driven logic of the upper layers of the capitalist world-economy and the socially-embedded and subsistence-driven logic that organizes the market in which market women operate. I also show that, to the extent that commercial microfinance partially penetrates the market, it disrupts the circulation of financial resources and weakens existing social and economic networks within the community.http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/640
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Irene Pang
spellingShingle Irene Pang
Banking is for Others: Contradictions of Microfinance in the Ghanaian Market
Journal of World-Systems Research
author_facet Irene Pang
author_sort Irene Pang
title Banking is for Others: Contradictions of Microfinance in the Ghanaian Market
title_short Banking is for Others: Contradictions of Microfinance in the Ghanaian Market
title_full Banking is for Others: Contradictions of Microfinance in the Ghanaian Market
title_fullStr Banking is for Others: Contradictions of Microfinance in the Ghanaian Market
title_full_unstemmed Banking is for Others: Contradictions of Microfinance in the Ghanaian Market
title_sort banking is for others: contradictions of microfinance in the ghanaian market
publisher University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
series Journal of World-Systems Research
issn 1076-156X
publishDate 2016-08-01
description Recent literature on microfinance has observed that commercial microfinance programs that achieve financial sustainability largely fail to reach the poor (Hulme 2000; Mayoux 2000; Cull, Demirgüç-Kunt, and Morduch 2007). Most studies rely on institutional explanations for this failure (Battilana and Dorado 2010; Pache and Santos 2010; Canales 2011). Using a Braudelian conceptualization of a fragmented, three-tiered capitalist world-economy, this study examines how Ghanaian market women finance their businesses within the bottom layer of the capitalist world-economy, and why, despite the availability of commercial microfinance, they continue to rely on informal finance. I argue that commercial microfinance is structurally constrained by contradictions between the profit-driven logic of the upper layers of the capitalist world-economy and the socially-embedded and subsistence-driven logic that organizes the market in which market women operate. I also show that, to the extent that commercial microfinance partially penetrates the market, it disrupts the circulation of financial resources and weakens existing social and economic networks within the community.
url http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/640
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