The effects of microfinance on women’s empowerment: new evidence from Bangladesh

Author:

Rahman Mohammad Mafizur,Khanam Rasheda,Nghiem Son

Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of microcredit on women’s empowerment in rural Bangladesh using the latest primary data. Design/methodology/approach Primary data have been collected by a household survey in the four districts of Bangladesh. Logistic regression is used to estimate the odd of improving women empowerment after participating in microfinance. Findings The results show positive impacts of microfinance on most of the selected indicators for women’s empowerment. Research limitations/implications Lack of control groups and baseline data are the main limitation of this research. Future research can address this issue by selecting institutions with baseline data or control groups. Practical implications The findings of the study can help policy makers to adopt appropriate policies that integrate empowerment in development projects with women. Social implications The results of this research could encourage more women to participate in microfinance activities and development projects. Originality/value This research provides the most updated data from a primary survey in Bangladesh. The authors also mitigate the possible selection biases by using a fixed-effects estimator.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

General Social Sciences,Economics and Econometrics

Reference45 articles.

1. Ahmad, S. (2006), “New perception of poverty in Bangladesh: do their programmes match the reality?”, MPhil thesis, University of Bergen, Bergen.

2. Women’s empowerment or disempowerment through microfinance: evidence from Bangladesh;Asian Social Work and Policy Review,2012

3. Six randomized evaluations of microcredit: introduction and further steps;American Economic Journal: Applied Economics,2015

4. Bhusal, M.K. (2010), “Does microfinance really empower? A study on the contribution of microfinance in empowering the poor women of Northern Bangladesh”, thesis, Degree Programme in Social Services, Diaconia University of Applied Sciences, Helsinki.

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