Financializing Poverty

Labor and Risk in Indian Microfinance

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Anthropology
Cover of the book Financializing Poverty by Sohini Kar, Stanford University Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Sohini Kar ISBN: 9781503605893
Publisher: Stanford University Press Publication: July 10, 2018
Imprint: Stanford University Press Language: English
Author: Sohini Kar
ISBN: 9781503605893
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Publication: July 10, 2018
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Language: English

Microfinance is the business of giving small, collateral-free loans to poor borrowers that are paid back in frequent intervals with interest. While these for-profit microfinance institutions (MFIs) promise social and economic empowerment, they have mainly succeeded at enfolding the poor—especially women—into the vast circuits of global finance. Financializing Poverty ethnographically examines how the emergence of MFIs has allowed financial institutions in the city of Kolkata, India, to capitalize on the poverty of its residents.

This book reveals how MFIs have restructured debt relationships in new ways. On the one hand, they have opened access to new streams of credit. However, as the network of finance increasingly incorporates the poor, the "inclusive" dimensions of microfinance are continuously met with rigid forms of credit risk management that reproduce the very inequality the loans are meant to alleviate. Moreover, despite being collateral-free loans, the use of life insurance to manage the high mortality rates of poor borrowers has led to the collateralization of life itself. Thus the newfound ability of the poor to use MFI loans has entrapped them in a system dependent not only on their circulation of capital, but on the poverty that threatens their lives.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Microfinance is the business of giving small, collateral-free loans to poor borrowers that are paid back in frequent intervals with interest. While these for-profit microfinance institutions (MFIs) promise social and economic empowerment, they have mainly succeeded at enfolding the poor—especially women—into the vast circuits of global finance. Financializing Poverty ethnographically examines how the emergence of MFIs has allowed financial institutions in the city of Kolkata, India, to capitalize on the poverty of its residents.

This book reveals how MFIs have restructured debt relationships in new ways. On the one hand, they have opened access to new streams of credit. However, as the network of finance increasingly incorporates the poor, the "inclusive" dimensions of microfinance are continuously met with rigid forms of credit risk management that reproduce the very inequality the loans are meant to alleviate. Moreover, despite being collateral-free loans, the use of life insurance to manage the high mortality rates of poor borrowers has led to the collateralization of life itself. Thus the newfound ability of the poor to use MFI loans has entrapped them in a system dependent not only on their circulation of capital, but on the poverty that threatens their lives.

More books from Stanford University Press

Cover of the book On Ethics and History by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book The Aesthetics of Hate by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book Bazaar Politics by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book Sectarian Gulf by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book Witnesses of the Unseen by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book Hip Figures by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book The Problem with Grace by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book The Kurillian Knot by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book For Better, For Worse by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book Lianda by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book Accident Society by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book The Self and It by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book Losing Afghanistan by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book Robinson Jeffers by Sohini Kar
Cover of the book The Mind-Body Stage by Sohini Kar
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy