Authors: Dr. Sultana I
Abstract: This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of financial inclusion among rural women, considering the complex barriers that perpetuate financial exclusion and the opportunities that exist for catalytic interventions. Through the systematic examination of the empirical evidence from low- and middle-income countries, with special reference to the experiences of India, the research aims to understand the complex interplay of institutional, socio-cultural, technological, and information barriers that limit rural women's access to and use of formal financial services. A conceptual framework of financial inclusion is developed as a multi-dimensional financial inclusion framework (MDFIF), which considers the difference between access barriers, use barriers, and quality. The analysis reveals that the self-help group (SHG) model has shown remarkable success, where the non-performing asset rates of women borrowers remain at lower levels of below 1.5 percent compared to other types of borrowers. Further, the meta-analytical evidence reveals that social safety nets have shown significant positive effects on women's economic achievements (Hedges' g = 0.113) and agency (Hedges' g = 0.101), with unconditional cash transfers and asset transfers showing the strongest effects. Evidence of the viability of graduation from group loans to women entrepreneurship financing is also emerging, as seen in the graduation model studies undertaken by SIDBI in their PRAYAS programme, where close to 2,500 women entrepreneurs have been assisted with minimal NPAs. The comparison of the five dimensions of evaluation—institutional mechanisms, technology solutions, capacity building, policy frameworks, and graduation—points to the need to look beyond access and build engagement, trust, and economic citizenship.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19108688
