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The Diffusion of Microfinance

TLDR
This article examined how participation in a micro-finance program diffuses through social networks and found that participants are significantly more likely to pass information on to friends and acquaintances than informed non-participants.
Abstract
We examine how participation in a microfinance program diffuses through social networks. We collected detailed demographic and social network data in 43 villages in South India before microfinance was introduced in those villages and then tracked eventual participation. We exploit exogenous variation in the importance (in a network sense) of the people who were first informed about the program, "the injection points". Microfinance participation is higher when the injection points have higher eigenvector centrality. We estimate structural models of diffusion that allow us to (i) determine the relative roles of basic information transmission versus other forms of peer influence, and (ii) distinguish information passing by participants and non-participants. We find that participants are significantly more likely to pass information on to friends and acquaintances than informed non-participants, but that information passing by non-participants is still substantial and significant, accounting for roughly a third of informedness and participation. We also find that, conditioned on being informed, an individual's decision is not significantly affected by the participation of her acquaintances.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mobilizing P2P Diffusion for New Agricultural Practices: Experimental Evidence from Bangladesh

TL;DR: Fafchamps et al. as discussed by the authors run a randomized controlled experiment in which farmers trained on a new rice cultivation method (SRI) teach two other farmers selected by us.

Leveraging social networks for agricultural development in Africa

Martha Ross
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the relationship between social networks and innovation diffusion within a developing country context and found that farmers who are exposed to both social learning and learning-by-doing more significantly impacts farmer productivity relative to those receiving no intervention and those exposed only to social learning.
Book ChapterDOI

ICT Adoption and Innovation in Ghana

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of ICT on innovation performance of manufacturing firms in Ghana was examined using survey data collected in 2013, and multivariate probit estimation, and the results suggest that ICT not only leads to a higher likelihood of firms to innovate but also directly enhances the growth of sales in new innovative products.
Journal ArticleDOI

Informal associations, shocks, and household food consumption: panel data estimation from rural Nigeria

TL;DR: The authors used the three-wave panel data for households in rural Nigeria from the General Household Surveys (GHS), which is part of the World Bank Living Standards Measurement Study - Integrated Surveys o...
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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