2022
DOI: 10.2307/j.ctv2tjd6qs
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A Critical History of Poverty Finance

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Cited by 24 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Digital finance quickly became incorporated in these grand plans, as an The Economist (2020) article enthused, "For those seeking to help the worst-off in poor countries, the mobile phone has been a magic wand" (as quoted in Bernards, 2022a). Here I situate digital finance within the broader context of "poverty finance" which Rankin (2013) defines as a global development strategy that coopts the Global South as an important site of financialization.…”
Section: Digital Financialization and Its Colonial Rootsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Digital finance quickly became incorporated in these grand plans, as an The Economist (2020) article enthused, "For those seeking to help the worst-off in poor countries, the mobile phone has been a magic wand" (as quoted in Bernards, 2022a). Here I situate digital finance within the broader context of "poverty finance" which Rankin (2013) defines as a global development strategy that coopts the Global South as an important site of financialization.…”
Section: Digital Financialization and Its Colonial Rootsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This in turn left a significant majority of the colonized population impoverished and in debt. Peasants and workers were indebted not to formal financial institutions but to the capitalist farms, mines and merchants that employed debt as a mechanism to discipline and commodify labor (Bernards, 2022a).…”
Section: Digital Financialization and Its Colonial Rootsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Over the past few decades, microfinance has become a dominant development strategy around the world. While the microfinance industry provides a range of services, its main business is lending credit, purportedly to reduce poverty, empower women, improve well‐being, or a combination of these goals (Bateman and Maclean, 2017; Bernards, 2022; Kar, 2018; Mader, 2015). However, in practice, the global microfinance industry no longer lends credit based on measuring these social impacts.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, by building a global industry based on financial performance indicators, microfinance is managed and regulated in ways that do not account for these informal practices. As a result, this industry claims that it successfully helps to alleviate poverty, even as it accumulates profits by appropriating wealth from poor and low‐income households across the global South (Bateman, 2010; Bernards, 2022; Green, 2022a; Schuster and Kar, 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%