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Microcredit meltdown : the rise and fall of South Sudan's post-conflict microcredit sector / Crystal Murphy.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Murphy, Crystal, author.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Microfinance--South Sudan.
- Microfinance.
- Poverty--South Sudan.
- Poverty.
- South Sudan--Economic conditions--21st century.
- South Sudan.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (260 pages)
- Place of Publication:
- Lanham : Lexington Books, [2019]
- Summary:
- Established to help people jumpstart their lives and economy after over a half century of conflict, the South Sudanese microcredit sector collapsed in 2012, six years after its takeoff, to the detriment of some 80,000 participants. Microcredit Meltdown is an account of the ambitious launch and premature downfall of the Southern Sudanese microcredit industry. Through a mixed methods ethnographic approach, the book charts the state and non-state actors that embarked upon economic development after war, the assumptions built into microlending, and the impact of ideologies and social norms on economic practice. The text compares industry theories with the experiences of borrowers and finds that microcredit failed in South Sudan due to false assumptions that were inapplicable to this post-conflict environment. Yet the over promising and under-delivering commercial microcredit was not isolated to South Sudan or even post-conflict settings. The Juba microcredit story is an instance of the broader global shift toward the commercial microcredit model. Initiated to get badly needed capital into the hands of poor people, instead the focus became sustaining a lending program. The text shows how the ideological and material constraints of the commercial microcredit paradigm were woefully misaligned with local socio-cultural realities, and created the collapse in South Sudan.
- Contents:
- From a galaxy far, far away to the souq: tracing the neoliberal tradition
- Does microcredit work? The limits of what we know
- I can't exchange for dollars but will you talk with me?: Learning in a different way
- Blueprints and architects: the beginnings of South Sudan microcredit
- Cookie cutters and meeting people: the role of postwar social ties in acquiring microcredit
- What's trust got to do with it? The value of postwar social ties within the group
- Borrower breakdowns: Diagnosing postwar ailments
- "They think food grows on trucks": An industry diagnosis
- Autopsy: The fall of South Sudan's microcredit sector
- Conclusion: Can we learn from the parable of South Sudan?
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Description based on print version record.
- ISBN:
- 1-4985-7739-3
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