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Original Articles

Microfinance and gender inequality: cross-country evidence

Pages 1494-1498
Received 09 Nov 2016
Accepted 24 Jan 2017
Published online: 09 Feb 2017
 
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Microfinance enables poor women to engage in income-generating activities, which helps them become financially independent, strengthening their decision-making power within the household and society. Consequently, microfinance has the potential to reduce gender inequality (GI). Case-study evidence from across the developing world both supports and contradicts this hypothesis. We therefore revisit this issue using macroeconomic cross-country panel data for 64 developing economies over the period 2003–2014. We find that women’s participation in microfinance is associated with a reduction in GI. However, regional interactions reveal that cultural factors are likely to influence the GI–microfinance nexus.

Additional information

Acknowledgements

We are thankful to Simon Feeny, Sefa Awaworyi Churchill, Nobuaki Yamashita, Jo En Yap and seminar participants in the International Development and Trade Research Group, RMIT, for valuable comments and suggestions on earlier drafts. We also thank one anonymous referee for helpful comments on an earlier version of this article. Any remaining error is our own responsibility.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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