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Savings Groups Reduce Vulnerability, but Have Mixed Effects on Financial Inclusion
Author(s) -
Verónica Frisancho,
Martín Valdivia
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
la referencia (red federada de repositorios institucionales de publicaciones científicas)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.18235/0002910
Subject(s) - microfinance , savings account , vulnerability (computing) , financial inclusion , poverty , treatment and control groups , business , unbanked , financial services , economics , finance , demographic economics , economic growth , statistics , computer security , mathematics , computer science
2Senior Researcher, Group for the Analysis of Development (GRADE). jvaldivi@grade.org.pe This paper evaluates the impact of the introduction of savings groups on poverty, vulnerability, and financial inclusion outcomes in rural Peru. Using a cluster randomized control trial and relying on both survey and administrative records, we investigate the impact of savings groups over a two year period. We find that savings groups channel expensive investments such as housing improvements and reduce households’ vulnerability to idiosyncratic shocks, particularly among households in poorer districts. The treatment also induces changes in households’ labor allocation choices: access to savings groups increases female labor market participation and, in poorer areas, it fosters greater specialization in agricultural activities. Access to savings groups also leads to a four-percentage point increase in access to credit among women, mainly driven by access to the group’s loans. However, the introduction of savings groups has no impact on the likelihood to use formal financial services. On the contrary, it discourages access to loans from formal financial institutions and microfinance lenders among the unbanked.

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