Microcredit is the newest silver
bullet for alleviating poverty. The United Nations declares on its website:
"Microentrepreneurs use loans as small as $100 to grow thriving business."
Wealthy philanthropists, governments and civil society have jumped on the
bandwagon. Even people of modest means can make small loans via the Web and
become instant microfinanciers. And large commercial banks such as Citigroup and
HSBC are establishing microcredit funds.
Given this increasing interest, the microcredit market has
grown to more than $27 billion. But do the poor benefit enough to justify the
resources? Microcredit often yields noneconomic benefits such as self-esteem and
social cohesion, and empowers women. But these are not enough. The issue is that
microcredit does not significantly alleviate poverty.
Most clients of microcredit are not entrepreneurs by choice. | The problem does not lie with microcredit, but with
microenterprises. Most microcredit clients are caught in subsistence activities
with no prospect of competitive advantage. With minimal skills and little
capital, these businesses operate in arenas with low entry barriers and too much
competition; they suffer poor productivity that leads to meager earnings that
cannot lift their owners out of poverty. This should come as no surprise. Most
people do not have the skills, vision, creativity and persistence to be
entrepreneurs. Even in developed countries, employees—not
entrepreneurs—represent 90 percent of the labor force. Most clients of
microcredit are not entrepreneurs by choice; they would gladly accept a factory
job at reasonable wages if one were offered. We should not romanticize the idea
of the poor as entrepreneurs. The International Labor Organization uses a more
appropriate term: own account workers.
The best way to eradicate poverty is to help create jobs on a
large scale in labor-intensive industries. Consider the pattern of poverty and
employment in China, India and Africa, which together account for roughly
three-quarters of the world’s poor citizens. In China, a large and growing
percentage of the population is employed and the number of people living in
poverty has declined in recent decades. In Africa, a small and shrinking
fraction of the population is employed, and the incidence of poverty has
remained unchanged during the same period. India’s performance lies somewhere
between the two: The number of jobs has grown some, and the number of people in
poverty has shrunk a little.
China, Vietnam and South Korea significantly reduced poverty in
recent years with little microcredit activity. On the other hand, Bangladesh,
Bolivia and Indonesia have not been as successful despite the influx of
microcredit.
Many people who have jobs are still stuck below the poverty
line. Job creation is not enough. We also have to increase productivity so that
wages are high enough to enable employees to rise above poverty. One way to
increase productivity is to encourage enterprises that are large enough to
achieve economies of scale. Rather than lending $200 to 500 women so that each
can buy a sewing machine and make garments, we would be better served by lending
$100,000 to an entrepreneur with managerial capabilities and business acumen to
help her set up a garment manufacturing business employing 500 people. This type
of business can exploit economies of scale, deploy specialized assets and use
modern business processes to generate value for both owners and employees.
Poverty alleviation cannot be defined only in economic terms;
we must also address a broader set of needs. Amartya Sen, the Nobel
Prize–winning economist, argues that development can be seen as a "process of
expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy." Services such as public health
and safety, basic education and infrastructure nurture these freedoms and
increase the productivity and employability of the poor, and thus their income
and well-being. So why not invest in both microenterprises and larger
enterprises? Financial resources are limited and expensive. Governments in
developing countries have only so much political capital and capacity.
Philanthropists, businesses, governments and civil society need to prioritize
and invest in development approaches with the highest payoffs, and reallocate
their resources away from microcredit and toward supporting larger enterprises
in labor-intensive industries. They should also focus on providing basic public
services that improve the employability and productivity of the poor.
Aneel Karnani is associate professor of strategy at the Ross
School of Business at the University of Michigan.
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