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UNU-WIDER Household Access to Microcredit and Children’s Food Security in Rural Malawi

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Household Access to Microcredit and Children’s Food Security in Rural Malawi: A Gender Perspective

Using data from the 1995 Malawi Financial Markets and Food Security Survey, this study seeks to discover if women’s relative control over household resources or intra-household bargaining power in rural Malawi, gauged by their access to microcredit, plays a role in children’s food security, measured by anthropometric nutritional Z-scores. Access to microcredit is assessed in a novel way as self-reported credit limits at microcredit organizations. Since credit limits, that is, the maximum sums that might be borrowed, hinge upon supply-side factors such as the availability of credit programmes and the financial resources of lenders, it is plausible they are more exogenous than demand driven loan uptake or participation in microcredit organizations, the common ways of gauging access to microcredit. It is indicated that whereas the access to microcredit of adult female household members improves 0- to 6-year old girls’, though not boys’, long-term nutrition as measured by height-for-age, the access to microcredit of males has no such salutary effect on either genders’ nutritional status. This may be interpreted as evidence of a positive relation between women’s relative control over household resources and young girls’ food security. That women’s access to microcredit improves young girls’ long-term nutrition may be explained in part by the subsidiary finding that it raises household expenditure on food.
Publisher:
UNU-WIDER
Series:
WIDER Research Paper
Volume:
2007/87
Title:
Household Access to Microcredit and Children’s Food Security in Rural Malawi: A Gender Perspective
Authors:
Basudeb Guha-Khasnobis and Gautam Hazarika
Publication date:
December 2007
ISSN Web:
1810-2611
ISBN 13 Web:
9789292300401
Copyright holder:
© UNU-WIDER
Copyright year:
2007
Keywords:
microcredit, gender, food security, Malawi
JEL:
J08, J21, I20, J16
Project:
Gender and Food Security
Sponsor:
The governments of Denmark (Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Finland (Ministry for Foreign Affairs), Norway (Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Sweden (Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency — Sida) and the United Kingdom (Department for International Development).
Format:
online

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