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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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Citations
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Impact of Network Structure on New Service Pricing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze the impact of network structure on the firm's revenue and optimal pricing decision, and find that the firm delays the timing of service monetization when it faces a more strongly connected network, despite the fact that such a network allows the firm to monetize the service sooner by resulting in faster consumption growth.
Posted Content

Adoption as a Social Marker: The Diffusion of Products in a Multigroup Environment.

TL;DR: This formal analysis, the first to take the spatial structure of a population into account, finds that as products become emergent social markers, aversion to outgroup-associated products can decrease overall patterns of adoption and promote the extent to which uptake of a product is locally polarized.
Posted Content

The Value of Information in Technology Adoption

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a theoretical model in which technology adoption decisions are based on the information received from others about the quality of a new technology and on their risk attitudes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Missing Links, Missing Markets: Internal Exchanges, Reciprocity and External Connections in the Economic Networks of Gambian Villages

TL;DR: In this article, a unique dataset of social and economic networks collected in 60 rural Gambian villages is used to study the ways in which households with links outside the village (that are considered as a proxy for market connections) behave in the locally available exchange networks for land, labor, input and credit.
Book ChapterDOI

Complex Contagions on Configuration Model Graphs with a Power-Law Degree Distribution

TL;DR: The theorem implies that if the power-law exponent α is in 2, 3, then with high probability, the single seed of the highest degree node will infect a constant fraction of the graph within time $$O\left \log ^{\frac{\alpha -2}{3-\alpha }}n\right $$Ologα-23-αn.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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