Debt and Financial Inclusion in Kenya, Eric Magale (9781041093824) — Readings Books

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Debt and Financial Inclusion in Kenya
Hardback

Debt and Financial Inclusion in Kenya

$305.00
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This book investigates people's relationship with credit and debt in Kenya. Exploring two increasingly popular financial services providers, digital lenders and cooperative societies, the book identifies fundamental flaws in financial inclusion strategies deployed in Kenya and their ability to alleviate poverty.

Co-operatives have long been important institutions for low to middle income Kenyans, long before the financial inclusion discourse came about. But it was the advent of mobile money in 2008 that transformed Kenya's financial services industry tremendously, and saw different fintech innovations built on the M-Pesa platform. In the last decade or so there has been a digital credit boom in Kenya with institutions of different kinds and more recently the government offering microloans to millions of Kenyans, arguing that that credit has the potential to help the poor forge their paths out of poverty. Based on extensive original research, this book examines how digital lenders and Savings and Credit Co-operative Societies (SACCOs) go about extending credit, and how borrowers experience this. The book shows that digital credit is an important component of a Kenyan's credit mix. However, the use of digital credit varies greatly between people who occupy different income classes. For the poor, who are the targets of financial inclusion, these loans often take the form of 'bad credit' which compromises their financial health, leaving them overindebted. The book explains the ways in which the current monetary system does not work for the poor, arguing that true financial inclusion can only be achieved via a fundamental rethinking of the money system.

Exposing important problems of speculative profiteering and the financialization of the poor, this book will be an important read for researchers of finance, banking, and development in Africa.

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Format
Hardback
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Country
United Kingdom
Date
26 March 2026
Pages
210
ISBN
9781041093824

This book investigates people's relationship with credit and debt in Kenya. Exploring two increasingly popular financial services providers, digital lenders and cooperative societies, the book identifies fundamental flaws in financial inclusion strategies deployed in Kenya and their ability to alleviate poverty.

Co-operatives have long been important institutions for low to middle income Kenyans, long before the financial inclusion discourse came about. But it was the advent of mobile money in 2008 that transformed Kenya's financial services industry tremendously, and saw different fintech innovations built on the M-Pesa platform. In the last decade or so there has been a digital credit boom in Kenya with institutions of different kinds and more recently the government offering microloans to millions of Kenyans, arguing that that credit has the potential to help the poor forge their paths out of poverty. Based on extensive original research, this book examines how digital lenders and Savings and Credit Co-operative Societies (SACCOs) go about extending credit, and how borrowers experience this. The book shows that digital credit is an important component of a Kenyan's credit mix. However, the use of digital credit varies greatly between people who occupy different income classes. For the poor, who are the targets of financial inclusion, these loans often take the form of 'bad credit' which compromises their financial health, leaving them overindebted. The book explains the ways in which the current monetary system does not work for the poor, arguing that true financial inclusion can only be achieved via a fundamental rethinking of the money system.

Exposing important problems of speculative profiteering and the financialization of the poor, this book will be an important read for researchers of finance, banking, and development in Africa.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Country
United Kingdom
Date
26 March 2026
Pages
210
ISBN
9781041093824