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Filling the Niche-the Trajectory of Financial inclusion among Smallholder Farmers in Africa: The case of Kenya a synthesis of success stories and challenges from Empirical Studies

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dc.contributor.author Owuor George
dc.date.accessioned 2018-11-06T13:21:56Z
dc.date.available 2018-11-06T13:21:56Z
dc.date.issued 2014-10
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/2178
dc.description.abstract This paper makes a synthesis of various empirical studies carried out in parts of Africa, and in Kenya to derive lessons on financial inclusion among smallholder farmers. The derived lessons point at a steadily growing expansion of financial services to rural poor traditionally characterised by high idiosyncratic risks and huge information asymmetry. This category of households seem to have made the African continent sustain itself in the midst of financial crisis in the 2008/09 when the rest of the world including the Asian tigers and the American capitalists faced serious setbacks in their financial sector growth. During this period, Africa experienced steady growth that started in 2000 at below 3% and peaked to about 4.8% by 2009-2013. The contribution of transformation of financial sector experienced in Kenya are some of the reasons for this growth. The paper elucidates the key determinants of access to the reformed financial services by the rural poor to include, access to targeted training on financial services beyond the formal education, participation of female headed households in collective frameworks and credit worthiness as exhibited by multiple borrowing points. The impact of such inclusion is exhibited by significant changes in purchasing power of households through income and diversified investment in farm assets. In all these successes, ICT through mobile money transfer played a significant role, as exhibited in studies across the region. Despite the successes, the key challenges include high fungibility of targeted funding, showing a need to provide an array of financial services to the poor including credit for consumption, school fees, medical cover and emergency loans found among the savings and credit cooperatives. Also the inequality and raising the poorest of the poor is still a challenge, one reason being the instrumental role of ICT through mobile money transfer system which some of the poorest farmers have no access. The newly introduced M-Shwari product, is something that extension personnel could take as part of their advice to small farmers in accessing short term loans and as means of savings funds between 100-10,000. These kind of funds are useful in particular in bridging financial gaps along the agribusiness value chains. The funds can be borrowed to transport produce to the market, and make payments in time to enable farmers capitalise on in their input purchases. A study on participation of smallholder farmers in M-Shwari type of saving and immediate credit service is still not known. These is an area for immediate uptake by all stakeholders including researchers as no lessons exist in this modality. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Moi Univesity press en_US
dc.subject financial inclusion en_US
dc.subject farmers en_US
dc.subject niche- en_US
dc.title Filling the Niche-the Trajectory of Financial inclusion among Smallholder Farmers in Africa: The case of Kenya a synthesis of success stories and challenges from Empirical Studies en_US
dc.type Presentation en_US


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