Case Study
India: Women's Self-Help Groups in Andhra Pradesh - Participatory Poverty Alleviation in Action
How have self-help groups (SHG) contributed to poverty alleviation in Andhra Pradesh?
31 pages
This document studies the effectiveness of self-help groups (SHG) as primary tool of poverty alleviation and empowerment. It states that a SHG is a small group of persons who come together with the intention of finding a solution to a common problem such as medical issues, livelihood generation or watershed management, with a degree of self-sufficiency. The document states that:
- National and state government initiatives have used SHGs to implement poverty alleviation programs in Andhra Pradesh since 1979;
- Self-help groups also empower poor women, more than 4.8 million of whom are mobilized into SHGs;
- Following on successes in earlier programs the state has promoted significant increases in SHGs using a social mobilization approach;.
It concludes that:
- When micro credit is the pivot around which organization takes place, its ability to alleviate poverty/empower is limited;
- SHGs should not be seen only in their capacity to route micro credit. Their political potential is powerful;
- Potential of women-only SHGs for women's empowerment depends upon several other supportive measures like education, health, housing and infrastructure;
- To approach a complicated problem such as poverty, a complex mix of methods is required.
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