How Access to Credit Affects Self-Employment

How Access to Credit Affects Self-Employment

Subtitle: 
Differences by Gender during India's Rural Banking Reform
Author: 
Meron, Nidhiya
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis Group
Record type: 
Responsibility: 
Rodgers, Yana Vander Meulen, jt. author
Journal Title: 
Journal of Development Studies
Source: 
The Journal of Development Studies, Vol.47,no.1, January 2011,pp.48-69
Abstract: 

Household survey data for 1983–2000 from India's National Sample Survey Organisation are used to examine the impact of credit on self-employment among men and women in rural labour households. Results indicate that credit access encourages women's self-employment as own-account workers and employers, while it discourages men's self-employment as unpaid family workers. Ownership of land, a key form of collateral, also serves as a strong predictor of self-employment. Among the lower castes in India, self-employment is less likely for scheduled castes prone to wage activity, but more likely for scheduled tribes prone to entrepreneurial work.

Language: 

CITATION: Meron, Nidhiya. How Access to Credit Affects Self-Employment . : Taylor & Francis Group , . The Journal of Development Studies, Vol.47,no.1, January 2011,pp.48-69 - Available at: https://library.au.int/how-access-credit-affects-self-employment-3