Self Help Groups, Financial Inclusion
and Women Empowerment 
A Critique
Author : Sowjanya S. Shetty
Lecturer in Economics
Poornaprajna College Udupi
Cell: 9482747373
Email: sowjanya936@gmail.com
Co-authors:
Dr V. Basil Hans
Associate Professor of Economics, and Research Supervisor
St Aloysius Evening College
Mangalore
Contact No: 9845237602
Email: vhans2011@gmail.com
Dr Prakasha Rao A.
Associate Professor
Department of Economics
Poornaprajna College Udupi
Cell:9448027072
Email: rao.pra@gmail.com
Objectives of the Study
 To critically examine the role and reach of SHGs towards empowerment
 To discuss the issues and initiatives in establishing linkages between the socio-economic
dynamics and womens empowerment
 To explore some strategies that may supplant or supplement the SHG initiatives and
remove the imbalances that still remain in accomplishing total empowerment of women
Methodology
 Present study is based on the collection of data from secondary sources. Secondary data
is obtained from various published and unpublished records, books, magazines and
journals
Conceptual and Operational Framework
Functions of SHGs:
 Creating a common fund by the members through their
regular savings.
 Maintaining a flexible working system and pooling the
resources in a democratic way.
 Conducting periodical meetings wherein decisions are
taken through group consensus and cooperation
 Lending small but reasonable amount of loans so that it
is easy to repay in time.
 Keeping the rate of interest affordable, varying from
group to group and loan to loan
 Womens indicators of empowerment through microfinance
 Increase in the ability to save and access loans
 Promotes entrepreneurial ability.
 Wider opportunity to undertake an economic activity
 Increase in mobility
 Creates awareness of local issues, MFI procedures, banking
transactions
 Promotes skills for income generation
 Enhancement of decision-making within the household as well as in
society
 Increase in mobilization of groups in support of individual clients
and social issues
 Actively participates in community development activities 
Critical Estimate
Issues:
 Problem of Liquidity
 Concentration in few states
 No uniformity in economic empowerment
 No scope for expansion of activities with small
amount of loan and high rate of interest
 Still remains as micro
Suggestions for strengthening SHG Movement
 Implementation of ICT based banking operations
 Skill development of SHG members
 Educating the SHG members and coordination amongst the SHGs, NGOs
 The Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana should be well-conceived as it enhances
the poors access to institutional credit
 Timely provision of credit at low rate of interest
 Enhancement of credit absorptive capacity of a region
 Encouraging SHGs in hitherto excluded regions
 Check on corruption and commission while sanctioning and upgrading the loan.
 Simplification of KYC norms
 Extension of the facilities of General credit card system in the form of overdraft
 Suggestions [contd]
 Identification of unbanked districts and opening bank branches there
 Belter interaction between bank official and SHG member
 Transparency should be maintained of records
 SHGs in empowering women through financial inclusion must scale up
in the parameters namely access, quality, usage and welfare
 For inclusive growth, besides financial inclusion, SHGs must strive for
health inclusion, education inclusion, housing inclusion, legal
inclusion, equity inclusion, leadership inclusion, and governance
inclusion too
 SHGs efforts must be linked with manufacturing, marketing and
service units
 Strengthening and integration of technology and human development
Conclusion
 SHGBank linkage program  a benchmark in
womens socio-economic empowerment
 Confidence boosting; status enhancing
 Financial deepening and financial widening need
to be balanced
 Microfinance/SHGs need healthy integration with
formal financial system
 Could develop more skill and enterprise under
Skill India and Start-up India, Stand up India
schemes
Thank you