Inside Microfinance Matrix: Microfinance Institutions’ Characteristics and Women Credit Access

This study aims to explore the role of Microfinance Institutions’ (MFIs) organisational characteristics including ownership structure, target market, and institutional size, in shaping the lending pattern in reaching women entrepreneurs. This study employs Ordinary Least Square and Fractional Logit...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues
Main Author: Jasmi Z.S.; Hassan N.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Econjournals 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85208712338&doi=10.32479%2fijefi.16977&partnerID=40&md5=e3b7b2d63dd1b906f8f1ceb9b54cd170
id 2-s2.0-85208712338
spelling 2-s2.0-85208712338
Jasmi Z.S.; Hassan N.
Inside Microfinance Matrix: Microfinance Institutions’ Characteristics and Women Credit Access
2024
International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues
14
6
10.32479/ijefi.16977
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85208712338&doi=10.32479%2fijefi.16977&partnerID=40&md5=e3b7b2d63dd1b906f8f1ceb9b54cd170
This study aims to explore the role of Microfinance Institutions’ (MFIs) organisational characteristics including ownership structure, target market, and institutional size, in shaping the lending pattern in reaching women entrepreneurs. This study employs Ordinary Least Square and Fractional Logit regression using STATA on pooled panel data of 2,330 MFIs across 116 countries. A fuzzy algorithm and Principal Component Analysis are applied to verify the consistency of the results. Findings suggest larger MFIs demonstrate greater inclusivity towards women, attributed to their extensive resources and institutional capabilities. Similarly, MFIs targeting affluent clients exhibit a higher likelihood of catering to the financial needs of women. Non-government organisations (NGOs) emerge as key drivers of women credit access, consistently prioritizing women entrepreneurs through targeted interventions. This study contributes to theoretical implications of the interplay between institutional ownership and goals related to social welfare. This finding also expands microfinance literature by emphasising how ownership influences the strategic orientation of MFIs. This study holds significance for financial regulators, and policymakers to utilise this study as a framework to evaluate the interplay between organisational scale, financial sustainability, and the fulfilment of social objectives within the microfinance sector. © 2024, Econjournals. All rights reserved.
Econjournals
21464138
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Jasmi Z.S.; Hassan N.
spellingShingle Jasmi Z.S.; Hassan N.
Inside Microfinance Matrix: Microfinance Institutions’ Characteristics and Women Credit Access
author_facet Jasmi Z.S.; Hassan N.
author_sort Jasmi Z.S.; Hassan N.
title Inside Microfinance Matrix: Microfinance Institutions’ Characteristics and Women Credit Access
title_short Inside Microfinance Matrix: Microfinance Institutions’ Characteristics and Women Credit Access
title_full Inside Microfinance Matrix: Microfinance Institutions’ Characteristics and Women Credit Access
title_fullStr Inside Microfinance Matrix: Microfinance Institutions’ Characteristics and Women Credit Access
title_full_unstemmed Inside Microfinance Matrix: Microfinance Institutions’ Characteristics and Women Credit Access
title_sort Inside Microfinance Matrix: Microfinance Institutions’ Characteristics and Women Credit Access
publishDate 2024
container_title International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues
container_volume 14
container_issue 6
doi_str_mv 10.32479/ijefi.16977
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85208712338&doi=10.32479%2fijefi.16977&partnerID=40&md5=e3b7b2d63dd1b906f8f1ceb9b54cd170
description This study aims to explore the role of Microfinance Institutions’ (MFIs) organisational characteristics including ownership structure, target market, and institutional size, in shaping the lending pattern in reaching women entrepreneurs. This study employs Ordinary Least Square and Fractional Logit regression using STATA on pooled panel data of 2,330 MFIs across 116 countries. A fuzzy algorithm and Principal Component Analysis are applied to verify the consistency of the results. Findings suggest larger MFIs demonstrate greater inclusivity towards women, attributed to their extensive resources and institutional capabilities. Similarly, MFIs targeting affluent clients exhibit a higher likelihood of catering to the financial needs of women. Non-government organisations (NGOs) emerge as key drivers of women credit access, consistently prioritizing women entrepreneurs through targeted interventions. This study contributes to theoretical implications of the interplay between institutional ownership and goals related to social welfare. This finding also expands microfinance literature by emphasising how ownership influences the strategic orientation of MFIs. This study holds significance for financial regulators, and policymakers to utilise this study as a framework to evaluate the interplay between organisational scale, financial sustainability, and the fulfilment of social objectives within the microfinance sector. © 2024, Econjournals. All rights reserved.
publisher Econjournals
issn 21464138
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
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