American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, volume 7, issue 1, pages 22-53

The Miracle of Microfinance? Evidence from a Randomized Evaluation

Abhijit Banerjee 1
Esther Duflo 2
Rachel Glennerster 3
Cynthia Kinnan 4
1
 
MIT Department of Economics, 40 Ames Street E17-201A, Cambridge, MA 02142 and National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and J-PAL (e-mail: )
2
 
MIT Department of Economics, 40 Ames Street E17-201B, Cambridge, MA 02142 and NBER and J-PAL (e-mail: )
3
 
J-PAL. 30 Wadsworth Street E53-320, Cambridge, MA 02142 (e-mail: )
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2015-01-01
scimago Q1
SJR8.933
CiteScore9.1
Impact factor5.5
ISSN19457782, 19457790
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Abstract

This paper reports results from the randomized evaluation of a group-lending microcredit program in Hyderabad, India. A lender worked in 52 randomly selected neighborhoods, leading to an 8.4 percentage point increase in takeup of microcredit. Small business investment and profits of preexisting businesses increased, but consumption did not significantly increase. Durable goods expenditure increased, while “temptation goods” expenditure declined. We found no significant changes in health, education, or women's empowerment. Two years later, after control areas had gained access to microcredit but households in treatment area had borrowed for longer and in larger amounts, very few significant differences persist. (JEL G21, G31, O16, O12, L25, I38)

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