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Abstract
Small financial loans (credit schemes) can be strategic to help African
subsistence farmers to develop their farms and in fostering new rural
micro-enterprises. Such credit can be provided and serviced by NGOs
(Non-Government Organisations – often charitable). Concomitant
training in financial management and entrepreneurship can be
helpful. Drawing on participant observer research and experience in
Southern and East Africa, the authors propose that ultimately – to be
sustainable - responsibility for such financial provision must be taken
by farmers themselves, both individually and communally. Initial help
from outsiders (such as charitable NGOs) may be crucial in catalysing
this provision and in setting up procedures for its prudent and
transparent management. However, ongoing help should be confined
to training in financial management and entrepreneurship, leaving
farmers themselves to organise and take responsibility for their funds,
interacting with the banks, or with traditional societies such as stokvels
where appropriate. Evidence is provided from the experience of ACAT
in South Africa over the past 33 years, of a hugely beneficial strategic
switch from expensively servicing and financially monitoring Savings
Clubs to encouraging their formation and management independently
by farmers. Lessons are drawn from and for work in East Africa. Their
application is the objective of this Paper.