This paper studies microfinance and debt trap nexus. The authors have used an ethnographic approach, unstructured observation, and interviews to develop scenarios with the help of which they try to explain the phenomenon. The research was carried out in DipKalaMoral, a small village located in Shikalbaha union under Karnaphuli Upazila of Chittagong in Bangladesh. They have found that excessive leverage through multiple borrowing leads to debt trap when households face unexpected income shocks due to economic cycle, unexpected weather (like heavy monsoon), wedding expenditure or paying dowry, and unexpected healthcare expenditure. In addition to that, they have found that informal money lenders tend to exploit households when households are heavily leveraged. Interestingly, they have identified a new phenomenon, ‘borrowing for others’, when households borrow from micro finance institutions (MFIs) to lend money to others. A number of policy measures have been recommended which could be beneficial for policymakers and MFIs.
CITATION STYLE
Uddin, M. A., & Uddin, S. M. S. (2021). Microfinance and Debt Trap: An Ethnographic Evidence From a Village in Bangladesh. International Journal of Asian Business and Information Management, 12(3). https://doi.org/10.4018/IJABIM.20210701.oa24
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