INFLUENCE OF FINANCIAL LINKAGES ON GROWTH OF INFORMAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS IN HOMA BAY COUNTY OF KENYA
Publication Date
2020Author
Benard Odhiambo Obop, Alphonce Juma Odondo, Nelson Obange
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract/ Overview
Financial linkage is an emerging form of partnership widely practiced between NGOs, formal and informal financial
institutions in developing countries. The existing forms include but not limited to financial training, Savings products
and Credit Information Sharing (CIS). Informal financial institutions enter into such linkages with an aim of growing
the volumes of credit accessed. In Homa Bay County, various forms of financial linkages have emerged with statistics
indicating unstable growth in volumes of credit accessed by informal financial institutions. According to Homa bay
Women Sacco, the loan disbursed grew by 88.46% between 2015 and 2017. This is in tandem with the institutional theory
of complementarity adopted by this study. However, studies on formal-informal financial institutions’ relationship and
contribution of financial linkages to credit access in developing countries have elicited divergent views. Some reveal that
financial linkages offer the best solution to promoting credit access while others indicate that the linkages may reduce
access to credit and impact negatively on growth of the institutions. It is on this basis that the study sought to establish
the influence of the emerging linkages on growth of informal financial institutions in Homa Bay County. The study was
based on the positivists approach to conceptualization and was guided by correlational research design. A total of 300
respondents were selected using stratified sampling technique. Both open and closed-ended pre-tested questionnaires were
used to collect primary data. Secondary data were from relevant documents of the institutions. The desired relationships
were established through multiple regressions while bivariate associations were determined using Correlational analysis.
The study revealed that volumes of group savings and Credit information sharing both had significant relationships with
the growth of informal financial institutions. On the other hand, financial training had an insignificant negative
relationship with access to credit by the institutions, the negative relationship suggests that through training, the informal
financial institution’s managers strengthen their internal management mechanisms, thus become less dependent on borrowed
funds for their activities. The study thus recommends that the three forms of linkages be strengthened to enhance growth
of the institutions in Homa Bay County.
Collections
- Department of Economics [104]