Authors
Juliana Siwale, John Ritchie
Publication date
2013/1/1
Journal
International Journal of Critical Accounting
Volume
5
Issue
6
Pages
641-662
Publisher
Inderscience Publishers Ltd
Description
The global trials of mainstream finance have brought calls for the development of human scale alternatives such as microfinance. However, developing country microfinance has itself been taken to task over its collective failings without much evidence about individual grassroots microfinance institution (MFI) failure. So, using an extended case study of PRIDE Zambia (PZ), this paper examines different stakeholder and other accounts about how this once promising MFI frontier failed. It finds that fast track founding and premature expansion based upon indifferent governance, hierarchical mismanagement, and unrecognised frontline problems further compounded by malpractice and corruption were central to PZ’s final failure. Zambia is a difficult frontier for donor-funded MFIs and, when PZ first sought to change its original grassroots character, its survival was so jeopardised that it failed as a result.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Siwale, J Ritchie - International Journal of Critical Accounting, 2013