Paper
You Can't Save Alone: Commitment in Rotating Savings and Credit Associations in Kenya
Why do individuals join ROSCAs?
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37 pages
This paper examines how and why individuals develop and maintain local-level Rotating Savings and Credit Associations (ROSCAs). The earlier theories suggest that individuals join ROSCAs to finance the purchase of a lumpy durable good or as an escape from intra-household conflict over spending.
The paper investigates the legitimacy of these arguments and suggests that:
- As participants do not expect to receive the goods sooner by joining the ROSCA group, the argument of lumpy durable goods does not hold good;
- Since the identity of the recipient of funds is not secret and contributions and rewards are shared among household members, the argument of intra-household conflict is also invalid.
The paper further proposes an alternative hypothesis for ROSCA participation - saving requires self-discipline, and ROSCAs provide a collective mechanism for individual self-control in an extremely institution-poor environment and in the absence of alternative commitment technologies.
The paper concludes that these findings have positive policy implications:
- Providing poor with an opportunity to save could have significant payoffs in terms of savings mobilization and asset accumulation in developing economies;
- Organizations seeking to transplant successful models of informal finance to new settings should incorporate the impact of local conditions on organizational design.
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