Helping the poor help themselves: Social enterprise and Ireland's peculiar microfinance revolution, c. 1836-1845

被引:0
作者
Mclaughlin, Eoin [1 ]
Pecchenino, Rowena [1 ]
机构
[1] Heriot Watt Univ, Edinburgh Business Sch, Dept Accountancy Econ & Finance, Edinburgh, Scotland
关键词
Social enterprise; microfinance; inequality; development; Ireland; G21; H75; I38; N23; N33; N83; POLITICAL-ECONOMY; SAVINGS BANKS; ENTREPRENEURSHIP; TAX; MICROCREDIT; INEQUALITY; POVERTY; ENGLAND; GROWTH; FAMINE;
D O I
10.1080/00076791.2025.2466655
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
In the decade before the Great Famine, Ireland experienced a boom in microfinance institutions (MFIs). Taking a social enterprise perspective, this paper analyses the institutional context for this boom. It finds evidence linking the boom in MFIs to the development, via the introduction of the poor law in 1838, of a nascent welfare state at the end of a very turbulent period in Irish history. Many contemporary writers saw microfinance as a legal means that could lessen the burden on rate payers by helping the poor help themselves. Econometric analysis at Poor Law Union level confirms the link between MFIs, an Irish solution, and the poor law, a British solution, to Ireland's chronic poverty. The goal of the Irish solution was to address what was perceived to be the cause of poverty, a want of capital, while the British solution addressed the symptoms of poverty but not its root cause.
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页数:28
相关论文
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