Welcome to the upgraded BRAC University Institutional Repository. We are currently organizing collections after a recent system upgrade. Homepage category counters may temporarily show lower numbers while syncing, but over 27,000 repository items remain safe and accessible. Please use the search bar to find theses, scholarly outputs, and institutional documents.

The impact of microcredit on household welfare: evidence from Bangladesh during the COVID-19 pandemic

Citation

Abstract

The onslaught of COVID-19 and the subsequent economic fallout have exacerbated global inequality, with the poor bearing a disproportionate brunt of the pandemic. This paper investigates whether access to credit—in the form of microloans—helped cushion the shock induced by COVID-19 and improved the welfare of poor households. Using survey data on microloan borrowers in Bangladesh, the analysis examines how access to microfinance affected clients during the COVID-19 crisis. A difference-in-differences (DID) methodology is employed to compare borrowers who received loans after the outbreak of the pandemic with those who did not. The results suggest that receiving microloans leads to increased business earnings, improved food security, and higher food expenditure. These effects are mainly driven by recipients of business-focused loans, while the impact of loans targeting poverty reduction appears limited.

Description

Department

Type

Article