The Effect of Non-agricultural Self-employment Credit on Contractual Relations and Employment in Agriculture:The Case of Microcredit Programmes in Bangladesh
Mark M. Pitt
Abstract
This paper examines the effect of group-based credit for the poor in
Bangladesh, by gender of participant, on participating household’s mix
of agricultural contracts (quantities of land sharecropped and rented),
and the supply of agricultural labour which takes the form of
own-cultivation as opposed to agricultural wage labour. The group-based
microcredit programmes examined provide production credit for
non-agricultural activities to essentially landless and assetless rural
households. Landless cultivators are more likely to have their
contractual choices shaped by credit market constraints than others. On a
priori grounds it is important to distinguish credit effects by gender
of participant. Male programme credit, if properly monitored, should
induce men to substitute away from supplying agricultural labour and
contracting for agricultural land to supplying the non-agricultural
labour required by the non-agricultural self-employment activity
financed by the microcredit programme. Programme participation by women,
who are otherwise much less involved in income-generating activities,
diversifies the sources of household income not merely by the type of
activity undertaken but also across individuals within the household.
These outcomes that permit households to choose higher return but
riskier agricultural contracts.
Econometric analysis of a 1991/92
household survey provides strong evidence that participation in these
group-based microcredit programmes substantially alters the mix of
agricultural contracts chosen by participating households. In
particular, both female and male participation induces a significant
increase in own-cultivation through sharecropping, coupled with a
complementary increase in male hours in field crop self-employment and a
reduction in male hours in the wage agricultural labour market,
consistent with its presumed effects in diversifying income and
smoothing consumption. Female credit effects are larger than male credit
effects in increasing sharecropping and in reducing male wage labour
and increasing agricultural self-employment, as predicted.