‘If You Fall, Stand Up Again’: The Moral Nature of Financial Literacy in the Global South
Maryann Bylander and
Phasy Res
Development and Change, 2021, vol. 52, issue 1, 26-53
Abstract:
Over the past decade a range of development actors have begun to implement financial literacy training in low‐income countries. These programmes have become a key pillar of financial inclusion projects targeting the rural poor but, to date, they have received little scholarly attention. This article draws on ethnographic observation of two financial literacy programmes implemented by microfinance institutions in Cambodia to examine the current practices of financial education in the global South. The findings highlight that while financial literacy training purports to be a technical, skill‐building intervention aimed at enabling knowledge, its practices work primarily to impress upon borrowers moral lessons associated with creditworthiness, while also stressing individual responsibility for debt stress. In this way, it furthers the goals of financial providers, but fails to address the complex and real problems of debt stress. The authors suggest that financial literacy, at least where it is enacted by microfinance providers, is unlikely to moderate the problems of over‐indebtedness faced by rural borrowers.
Date: 2021
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https://doi.org/10.1111/dech.12627
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:bla:devchg:v:52:y:2021:i:1:p:26-53
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