Publication | Open Access
From Boom to Bust: How Different Has Microfinance Been from Traditional Banking?
58
Citations
30
References
2012
Year
Financial InstitutionsMicrofinanceInternational Financial CrisisTraditional Banking SectorLehman BrothersRetail BankingFinancial SystemFintechInternational FinanceManagementDigital BankingEconomicsCredit MarketLoansFintech AdoptionVenture CapitalFinanceMicrofinance SectorTraditional BankingBusinessMicro Finance InstitutionCorporate FinanceFinancial Crisis
This article presents in‐depth analysis of developments in the microfinance sector before and after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008, by comparing them with developments in the traditional banking sectors of emerging markets and developing countries. Its findings indicate that microfinance has been part of the same credit boom observed in the traditional banking sector, and that the boom was also fostered by substantial inflows of foreign capital. Further, that risks associated with credit booms in the traditional sector also evolved in the microfinance sector. The article comes to the conclusion that, by becoming part of the global financial system, microfinance has lost one of the characteristics distinguishing it from traditional banking, namely, its greater resilience to crises in domestic and global financial markets.
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