| Literature DB >> 25441225 |
Lindsay Stark1, Nafessa Kassim, Thalia Sparling, Dale Buscher, Gary Yu, Neil Boothby.
Abstract
This paper presents an evaluation of the long-term impact of microfinance programmes on Acehnese children during the post-tsunami recovery. The study, conducted from June to August 2010, examined the impact of microfinance programming six years after the tsunami. The sample consisted of 185 microfinance participants, with a comparison group of 192 individuals who did not participate in microfinance programmes. All respondents were parents, interviewed through a structured survey. The study used four child protection indicators-diet, health, childcare and education-in contrast to traditional repayment rate indicators. The primary results were insignificant with respect to all four child protection indicators, suggesting that, with respect to these indicators, there was no long-term difference between the impact of microfinance on beneficiaries' children and non-beneficiaries' children. These findings signify a need for microfinance actors to move beyond traditional indicators of economic success to evaluate the social changes microfinance programmes are presumed to effect.Entities:
Keywords: child protection; indicators; microfinance; tsunami
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25441225 PMCID: PMC4381782 DOI: 10.1111/disa.12101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Disasters ISSN: 0361-3666