Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

Micro-Credit : A West Bengal Perspective


Affiliations
1 Bidhannagar College, EB-2, Saltlake, Sector 1, Kolkata-700064, India
2 Indian Statistical Institute, 203, B. T. Road, Kolkata-700 108, India
3 Department of Economics, Calcutta University, Kolkata, India
4 Department of Economics, Delhi School of Economics, Delhi, India
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


Micro-finance as a concept emerged when social innovators began to offer financial services to the working poor - those who were previously considered "un-bankable" because of their lack of collateral. Once given the opportunity, not only did the clients expand their business and increase their incomes, but also their high repayment rates demonstrated that the poor are capable of transforming their own lives given the chance. The most common micro-finance product is a micro-credit loan. In the process the poor gets a secured place to save their money, earn social security and leadership qualities and realise the need of education. Micro-credit loans empower the poor to improve their own lives. By giving the world's poor a hand up, not a handout, micro-finance can help break the vicious cycle of poverty in as little as a single generation.

Keywords

Micro-Finance, Micro-Credit Loans, Poverty Alleviation, Social Empowerment.
Subscription Login to verify subscription
User
Notifications
Font Size


Abstract Views: 289

PDF Views: 1




  • Micro-Credit : A West Bengal Perspective

Abstract Views: 289  |  PDF Views: 1

Authors

Debarchana Bhattacharya
Bidhannagar College, EB-2, Saltlake, Sector 1, Kolkata-700064, India
Probal Mojumder
Indian Statistical Institute, 203, B. T. Road, Kolkata-700 108, India
Samrat Sanyal
Department of Economics, Calcutta University, Kolkata, India
Sujana Kabiraj
Department of Economics, Delhi School of Economics, Delhi, India

Abstract


Micro-finance as a concept emerged when social innovators began to offer financial services to the working poor - those who were previously considered "un-bankable" because of their lack of collateral. Once given the opportunity, not only did the clients expand their business and increase their incomes, but also their high repayment rates demonstrated that the poor are capable of transforming their own lives given the chance. The most common micro-finance product is a micro-credit loan. In the process the poor gets a secured place to save their money, earn social security and leadership qualities and realise the need of education. Micro-credit loans empower the poor to improve their own lives. By giving the world's poor a hand up, not a handout, micro-finance can help break the vicious cycle of poverty in as little as a single generation.

Keywords


Micro-Finance, Micro-Credit Loans, Poverty Alleviation, Social Empowerment.