MICROFINANCE TO MICROENTERPRISES: A STUDY
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.53555/bma.v5i3.1754Keywords:
Microfinance, Microenterprises, Non-Governmental Organisations, Self-Help Groups , Self-employmentAbstract
A sound financial system backed by strong banking sector is a pre-requisite for overall economic development and financial stability. No doubt, banking industry and banking services have expanded. However, the problem of exclusion continued even after social control of banks. In the midst of the apparent inadequacies to cater to the financial requirements of the poor, an innovation in the credit delivery system named Self-Help Groups emerged. This paper attempts to study potential and performance of SHGs in promoting selfemployment among the SHG members and to understand its impact on income and employment. Microfinance is not an end in itself. SHGs are a strategic instrument to eradicate poverty and to realise the objective of economic development and empowerment of the poor. Microfinance in one stroke cannot transform the livelihood of the people. The data compiled clearly indicates positive impact of SHG lending on income and employment and a move towards self-employment development. The challenges confronted with the SHGs in moving towards self-employment are both internal and external in nature. Microcredit can effectively work and promote further success, only when it works only when loan offered directed is productively utilised. There is the need for creating awareness among the rural folk about the rational use of funds borrowed. Mentoring is the need of the hour.
Downloads
References
Adams, Dale W, and Fitchett, D.A. (1992). Informal Finance in low-income countries, West View Press, Oxford.
Government of Karnataka, Udupi District at a Glance, 2017.
Government of Karnataka, Human Development Report: Udupi District, 2014.
Udupi Zilla Panchayat, Udupi.
National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD), Status of Microfinance 2017.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2020 Green Publication
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
All journals related to business, management, and accounting can be freely copied, circulated, and reprinted in Green Publication journals, as long as they are duly referenced by original authors. Green Publication follows CC licenses. “A Creative Commons (CC) license is one of the public copyright licenses that allows for the free reuse of an otherwise copyrighted "work." If an author wants to give others the right to publish, use, and build on a work created by the author, he may use a CC license. Green publication use the CC 4.0 license. This license allows anyone to write, remix, tweak, and build on your work, even commercially, as long as the original creation is attributed to you”. This is the most appropriate license available. Recommended for increasing the distribution and use of licensed products.