Impact of credit risk mitigation on mission drift in Indian MFIs
By: Revulagadda, Rajeev Kumar Ranjani, K. S. and Kumar, Sanjeev
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BookPublisher: Journal of Social and Economic Development Description: 27(2), Aug, 2025: p.393-407.Subject(s): Microfinance, Credit risk, Mission drift, Poverty| Item type | Current location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Articles
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Indian Institute of Public Administration | 27(2), Aug, 2025: p.393-407 | Available | AR138530 |
Microfinance Institutions (MFIs) manage credit risk in order to control the default rate, with an emphasis on developing a self-sustaining enterprise. The mitigation of credit risk has been regarded as a central aspect of establishing a financially viable enterprise. MFIs employ diverse risk-mitigation practices at different stages, beginning with borrower screening and continuing through group formation, lending, and repayment collection. However, robust risk-mitigation practices should not result in the exclusion of low-income borrowers. We used the Mix Market database to collect information on Indian MFIs in order to investigate whether the MFIs credit risk-mitigation strategies are contributing to the exclusion of low-income borrowers. The credit risk-mitigation measures, including portfolio at risk, group lending, loans lent to women, write-off ratio, risk coverage ratio, provision for loan impairments are used to determine the impact, if any, on the average loan size. Our panel study on Indian MFIs using GMM (generalised method of moments) approach demonstrates that the increase in credit risk measures, such as risk coverage ratio and provision for loan impairment, has a positive impact on the mission drift measure, which indicates that the MFIs financial objective is eroding its social goal.-Reproduced
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40847-024-00365-1


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