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Poverty Scorecards: Lessons from a Microlender in Bosnia‐Herzegovina
11
Citations
12
References
2014
Year
Population PovertyEconomic DevelopmentDevelopment EconomicsMicrofinanceEducationPoverty ReductionAbsolute PovertyPoverty ScorecardsPovertyPoverty AlleviationSocio-economic DevelopmentEconomicsPublic PolicyLoansPoverty MeasurementCommunity DevelopmentPopulation InequalityBusinessLow Income Developing CountryMicro Finance InstitutionFinancingLoan Size
Abstract How poor are participants in development projects? This article analyzes how well a simple scorecard identifies poor clients at a microlender in Bosnia‐Herzegovina. The scorecard effectively ranks clients by the likelihood that they are poor by an absolute, expenditure‐based standard. The score tracks poverty more closely than loan size, microfinance's traditional poverty indicator. Overall, poverty scorecards are a simple, inexpensive way for microlenders—or any other development entity—to target the poor, track changes in poverty over time, manage poverty outreach, and report on clients' absolute poverty .
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