microfinanceandworldhunger.org
Evidence Project | What We’ve Learned about Microfinance and World Hunger | Page 5
http://microfinanceandworldhunger.org/page/5
What We're Learning about Microfinance and World Hunger. Observations of the USAID Evidence Summit Day One, December 12. Theme One: Invitation to a Conversation on Microfinance and World Hunger. December 2012 I Leave a comment. More about Dupas and Robinson on the Psychology of Saving Behavior. My last post (#42) provided a layman's summary for laymen of the paper by Pascaline Dupas and Jonathan Robinson (D and R) on Why Don’t the Poor Save More? December 2012 I Leave a comment. The academic discussions ...
microfinanceandworldhunger.org
Impact on Household Poverty—the Poverty Gap and the Poverty Bubble | Evidence Project
http://microfinanceandworldhunger.org/2013/06/impact-on-household-poverty-the-poverty-gap-and-the-poverty-bubble
What We're Learning about Microfinance and World Hunger. Impact on Household Poverty the Poverty Gap and the Poverty Bubble. June 6, 2013. In Theme Three, I found that the more credible impact studies of access to microfinance had uncovered little statistically significant positive impact on household income and consumption. This general conclusion is affirmed by the just-released results of the impact study of Compartamos. Poverty reduction starts with poverty. Of MicroFinanza Rating and Sanjay Sinha.
microfinanceandworldhunger.org
The Poverty Outreach of Savings Group Programs | Evidence Project
http://microfinanceandworldhunger.org/2013/06/the-poverty-outreach-of-savings-group-programs
What We're Learning about Microfinance and World Hunger. The Poverty Outreach of Savings Group Programs. June 9, 2013. The standard message from advocates is that savings group programs reach poorer people than do credit-led microfinance institutions (MFIs). In post # 78. Amounts of Loans and Savings on Deposit. Savings Groups at the Frontier. That loan size is as much a function of the provider’s policy and the availability of alternative providers as it is reflective of the borrower’s poverty status po...
breshvic.wordpress.com
Résumé | Absurdist Noir
https://breshvic.wordpress.com/resume
The Blog of Eternal Stench. I’m interested in learning and working in a wide range of creative fields, including commercial art, writing, design, editorial work, copywriting, journalism, the liberal arts and humanities. I would rather look back on a life with a thematic but multifarious career, rather than having served one field or company with my skill-sets. Novel concepts, abstruse art, profound language, complex media, and diverse people fascinate me. So do adjectives. THE ART INSTITUTE OF PITTSBURGH.
girlsforachange.org
GFC's Impact
http://www.girlsforachange.org/what/impact.htm
Girls for a Change. Und Girls To Brazil. In 2010, GFAC and See Change. Embarked on a new layer of analysis involving linguistic and video discourse analysis. Linguistic analysis in this context seeks to surface beliefs and attitudes through quantitative (What words do people use, and how often do they use them? And qualitative (What do people talk about? How does the content and style of speech relate to the context of the speaker? In addition, GFAC is surveying alumna girls to measure the lasting impact...
microfinanceandworldhunger.org
A Different Notion of “Sustainability” | Evidence Project
http://microfinanceandworldhunger.org/2013/05/a-different-notion-of-sustainability
What We're Learning about Microfinance and World Hunger. A Different Notion of Sustainability. May 23, 2013. As it is labeled in. Savings Groups at the Frontier. Is there a business case for savings-led microfinance (specifically savings group. That is at all comparable to the business case that has been made in Theme Seven for credit-led microfinance (specifically village banking)? There are three levels in the institutional structure of both credit- and savings-led programs. First. Level is more variab...
microfinanceandworldhunger.org
Theme Three – More Profitable Business & More Household Income? | Evidence Project
http://microfinanceandworldhunger.org/theme-three
What We're Learning about Microfinance and World Hunger. Theme Three – More Profitable Business & More Household Income? Post 19: What Proportion of the Poor are Capital-constrained Entrepreneurs? Post 20: First Step in the Microfinance Theory of Change: Take a Loan or Save Do They? Post 21: Second Step in the Microfinance Theory of Change: Invest in a Viable Business Do They? Post 22: Second Step in the Microfinance Theory of Change: Loan Use Part II. A Ghanaian explains her microfinance passbook to Chr...
microfinanceandworldhunger.org
A Different Notion of “the Market” | Evidence Project
http://microfinanceandworldhunger.org/2013/05/a-different-notion-of-the-market
What We're Learning about Microfinance and World Hunger. A Different Notion of the Market. May 24, 2013. Is there a business case for savings-led microfinance (specifically savings group programs) that is at all comparable to the business case that has been made in Theme Seven for credit-led microfinance (specifically village banking)? Referring to my last post (# 75. And its three levels of program structure (client, provider, investor), my question resides at the second level the local service provider.
microfinanceandworldhunger.org
Evidence Project | What We’ve Learned about Microfinance and World Hunger | Page 3
http://microfinanceandworldhunger.org/page/3
What We're Learning about Microfinance and World Hunger. When Client Needs and Provider Responses Go Beyond Financial Services. Theme Six: Better Health and Nutrition Practices and Greater Use of Vital Health Products and Services? April 2013 I 1 comment. What Does the Evidence Mean for Freedom from Hunger? For 25 years, Freedom from Hunger has designed, tested and taug read more. Theme Five: Increased Social Capital and Improved Self-Confidence? April 2013 I 2 comments. By Lynne Davidson Jarrell Lynne h...