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Paying back comes first: why repayment means more than business in rural Senegal

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Gender & Development

Volume
17
Issue
2
Theme
Work
Publication Date
Jul 2009
Author(s)
Amelia Duffy-Tumasz
Editor (s)
Caroline Sweetman
Publisher:
Gender & Development is published for Oxfam GB by Routledge
ISSN:
1355-2074
E-ISSN:
1364-9221
STOCK CODE:
002J1406
FORMAT:
PDF (pp.11)
Link to PDF
 Read this article online (PDF file)
Abstract


Giving small loans to women has become a mainstay in development practitioners' toolkits. Using data collected for Oxfam America's Saving for Change (SFC) project, this article argues that repayment of micro-credit cannot be used as a measure of micro-enterprise development per se. Instead, repayment signals the presence of peer pressure, loan sharing and remittance payments in the studied setting. This conclusion is borne through an ethnographic approach, which focuses on who accesses loans, how people who access loans use them, and how borrowers mobilise resources for repayment. The research indicates that future studies should use ethnography in tandem with other approaches to evaluation, and concludes with implications for an agenda seeking to forward women's workers rights.

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