Do African microfinance institutions need efficiency for financial stability and social outreach?

Microfinance institutions (MFIs) have the dual objective of providing social welfare and financial stability. We evaluated the financial efficiency of MFIs in sub-Saharan African countries by comparing their regional performances during the period 2004'2013. We addressed prevailing MFI heteroge...

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Main Authors: Azad, M.A.K., Munisamy, S., Masum, A.K.M., Wanke, P.
Format: Article
Published: Academy of Science of South Africa 2016
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/18398/
http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/sajs.2016/20150474
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spelling my.um.eprints.183982017-11-30T07:17:31Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/18398/ Do African microfinance institutions need efficiency for financial stability and social outreach? Azad, M.A.K. Munisamy, S. Masum, A.K.M. Wanke, P. HF Commerce HG Finance Microfinance institutions (MFIs) have the dual objective of providing social welfare and financial stability. We evaluated the financial efficiency of MFIs in sub-Saharan African countries by comparing their regional performances during the period 2004'2013. We addressed prevailing MFI heterogeneity by using the concept of 'metafrontier'. The results showed that on an average, more than half the MFIs showed a drop in productivity. The measure of how much one country gets closer to or further away from world frontier technology is commonly known as the TGC score. In world frontier technology, East and South Asian countries have taken the lead (TGC score 1.0048) while sub-Saharan African countries lag behind (TGC score 1.0020). Most East and South Asian countries have a TGC score of 1, and most sub-Saharan African countries have a TGC score less than 1. This signifies that Asian countries lead world frontier technology and most African countries do not. The decomposition of efficiency scores showed that with regard to technical changes, African nations had progressed on average only 0.01%, and efficiency change scores had regressed by 0.59% annually. Significance: • First efficiency study on microfinance institutions and their heterogeneity in Africa. • The results show robust discrimination among the efficiency scores. Academy of Science of South Africa 2016 Article PeerReviewed Azad, M.A.K. and Munisamy, S. and Masum, A.K.M. and Wanke, P. (2016) Do African microfinance institutions need efficiency for financial stability and social outreach? South African Journal of Science, 112 (9-10). p. 20150474. ISSN 0038-2353 http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/sajs.2016/20150474 doi:10.17159/sajs.2016/20150474
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic HF Commerce
HG Finance
spellingShingle HF Commerce
HG Finance
Azad, M.A.K.
Munisamy, S.
Masum, A.K.M.
Wanke, P.
Do African microfinance institutions need efficiency for financial stability and social outreach?
description Microfinance institutions (MFIs) have the dual objective of providing social welfare and financial stability. We evaluated the financial efficiency of MFIs in sub-Saharan African countries by comparing their regional performances during the period 2004'2013. We addressed prevailing MFI heterogeneity by using the concept of 'metafrontier'. The results showed that on an average, more than half the MFIs showed a drop in productivity. The measure of how much one country gets closer to or further away from world frontier technology is commonly known as the TGC score. In world frontier technology, East and South Asian countries have taken the lead (TGC score 1.0048) while sub-Saharan African countries lag behind (TGC score 1.0020). Most East and South Asian countries have a TGC score of 1, and most sub-Saharan African countries have a TGC score less than 1. This signifies that Asian countries lead world frontier technology and most African countries do not. The decomposition of efficiency scores showed that with regard to technical changes, African nations had progressed on average only 0.01%, and efficiency change scores had regressed by 0.59% annually. Significance: • First efficiency study on microfinance institutions and their heterogeneity in Africa. • The results show robust discrimination among the efficiency scores.
format Article
author Azad, M.A.K.
Munisamy, S.
Masum, A.K.M.
Wanke, P.
author_facet Azad, M.A.K.
Munisamy, S.
Masum, A.K.M.
Wanke, P.
author_sort Azad, M.A.K.
title Do African microfinance institutions need efficiency for financial stability and social outreach?
title_short Do African microfinance institutions need efficiency for financial stability and social outreach?
title_full Do African microfinance institutions need efficiency for financial stability and social outreach?
title_fullStr Do African microfinance institutions need efficiency for financial stability and social outreach?
title_full_unstemmed Do African microfinance institutions need efficiency for financial stability and social outreach?
title_sort do african microfinance institutions need efficiency for financial stability and social outreach?
publisher Academy of Science of South Africa
publishDate 2016
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/18398/
http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/sajs.2016/20150474
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score 13.160551