小额信贷的排他性力量

IF 1.3 Q3 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
W. N. Green, M. Bylander
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引用次数: 15

摘要

近年来,国际银行、投资机构和发展机构通过在全球南方迅速扩大商业小额信贷行业,为资本积累创造了新市场。柬埔寨拥有世界上最大的小额信贷行业之一,其典型的贷款金额现在超过了家庭平均年收入,需要土地抵押品。柬埔寨借款人的债务越来越重,迫使家庭减少粮食消费,获得新的贷款来偿还之前的债务,移民和/或出售陷入困境的土地。在本文中,我们研究了过度负债、土地销售困境的最后一个影响。我们认为,小额信贷债务的排斥力——由担保的法律合同、道德责任话语和公众羞耻感构成——正在推动该国最弱势人群的土地掠夺。为了提出我们的论点,我们利用了人种学实地调查,并辅以柬埔寨社会经济调查、MIX市场和两项行业赞助的大规模过度负债定量调查的定量数据。我们追踪了商业小额信贷行业的兴起,展示了它是如何导致过度负债的,并考虑了家庭债务如何导致土地销售困难。这些土地销售在很大程度上没有得到业内的承认,因为它们是通过非正式渠道而不是法院系统进行的。我们得出的结论是,小额金融债务导致的柬埔寨土地征用是过度商业化的国际小额金融行业的产物,该行业现在重利润轻人民。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Exclusionary Power of Microfinance
In recent years, international banks, investment agencies, and development institutions have created new markets for capital accumulation by rapidly expanding the commercial microfinance industry in the global South. In Cambodia, which has one of the largest microfinance industries in the world, the typical loan amount now exceeds the average annual household income and requires land-based collateral. Cambodian borrowers are increasingly over-indebted, compelling families to reduce their food consumption, take out new loans to service prior debts, migrate, and/or sell their land in distress. In this paper, we investigate this last effect of over-indebtedness, distress land sales. We argue that the exclusionary power of microfinance debt—constituted by collateralized legal contracts, discourses of moral responsibility, and public shame—is driving land dispossession among the country’s most vulnerable people. To make our argument, we draw on ethnographic fieldwork, supplemented by quantitative data from the Cambodia Socio-Economic Survey, MIX Market, and two industry-sponsored large-scale quantitative surveys of over-indebtedness. We trace the rise of the commercial microfinance industry, show how it has contributed to over-indebtedness, and consider how household debts can lead to distress land sales. These land sales have largely gone unacknowledged in the industry because they take place through informal channels rather than the court system. We conclude that microfinance-debt-induced land dispossession in Cambodia is a product of an overly commercialized international microfinance industry that now values profits over people.
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来源期刊
Sociology of Development
Sociology of Development Social Sciences-Development
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
8.30%
发文量
14
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