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There's nothing micro about a billion women : making finance work for women / Mary Ellen Iskenderian.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge, Massachusetts : The MIT Press, [2022]Description: xvii, 209 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780262046442
  • 026204644X
Subject(s):
Contents:
Part I. Women's financial inclusion: clearing the roadblocks to empowerment. The road to financial inclusion ; What's standing in the way of women's financial inclusion? ; From invisibility to agency -- Part II. Making the business case. Making the business case for building wealth ; Making the business case for access to capital ; Making the business case for managing risk ; Call to action.
Summary: "The full financial inclusion of women will lead to significant advances in global economic development"-- Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction 332.024 I81 Available 33111010873210
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Why it takes more than microloans to empower women and promote sustainable, inclusive economic growth.

Nearly one billion women have been completely excluded from the formal financial system. Without even a bank account in their own names, they lack the basic services that most of us take for granted-secure ways to save money, pay bills, and get credit. Exclusion from the formal financial system means they are economic outsiders, unable to benefit from, or contribute to, economic growth. Microfinance has been hailed as an economic lifeline for women in developing countries-but, as Mary Ellen Iskenderian shows in this book, it takes more than microloans to empower women and promote sustainable, inclusive economic growth.

Iskenderian, who leads a nonprofit that works to give women access to the financial system, argues that the banking industry should view these one billion "unbanked" women not as charity cases but as a business opportunity- a lucrative new market of small business owners, heads of households, and purchasers of financial products and services. Iskenderian shows how financial inclusion can be transformative for the lives of women in developing countries, describing, among other things, the informal moneylenders and savings clubs that women have relied on, the need for both financial and digital literacy (and access) as mobile phones become a means of banking, and the importance of women's property rights. She goes on to make the business case for financial inclusion, exploring the ways that financial institutions are adapting to help women build wealth, access capital, and manage risks. Banks can do the right thing-and make money while doing so-and all of us can benefit.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Part I. Women's financial inclusion: clearing the roadblocks to empowerment. The road to financial inclusion ; What's standing in the way of women's financial inclusion? ; From invisibility to agency -- Part II. Making the business case. Making the business case for building wealth ; Making the business case for access to capital ; Making the business case for managing risk ; Call to action.

"The full financial inclusion of women will lead to significant advances in global economic development"-- Provided by publisher.

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