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Can Microfinance Promote Livelihoods and Reduce Vulnerability Among Adivasis? A Study of Some NGO Interventions from Karnataka and Tamil Nadu:

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TLDR
In this article, the authors analyzed the impact of micro-finance on adivasi households' livelihoods and vulnerability in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu states by collecting data from primary data collected from Kannanayakkumar et al. They found that although many adivasis have joined microfinance groups, made small savings and availed credit facility, micro finance activities have not significantly improved their livelihoods.
Abstract
To what extent have NGO microfinance programmes for adivasi households promoted livelihoods and reduced poverty and vulnerability among them? This question is analysed with the help of primary data collected from Karnataka and Tamil Nadu states. Although adivasi households have joined microfinance groups, made small savings and availed credit facility, microfinance activities have not significantly improved livelihoods and reduced vulnerability. In the absence of savings products to meet expenses on housing and marriage, and access to formal social security services such as health insurance, adivasis are forced to borrow from informal sources. This places them into inextricable debt traps, undoing whatever positive impact that microfinance programmes may have. To avoid such a situation, meaningful savings products and access to social security are needed.

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Good debts, bad debts: microcredit and managing debt in rural south India

TL;DR: The authors argue that microcredit can only be understood within the wider context of debt, and draw on ethnographic material from two villages in Tamil Nadu, to examine how microcredit through self-help groups sits within a broader context of indebtedness among the rural labouring classes.

Does Ngo Microfinance Alleviate Poverty In Pakistan? A Quasi-Experimental Approach

TL;DR: In this article, the role of non-governmental organizations in poverty alleviation in rural areas of Pakistan is investigated and the results reveal that micro-finance has positive impact on the borrowers' income and consumption while negative impact for saving and assets.
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