Skip navigation.
banner fai kid with text - updated

Impact through Research

Research Areas Photo
Innovation requires attention to the psychology and broad needs of low-income families to create the next generation of financial solutions.
Details of savings, credit and insurance products can determine their success and failure—sometimes in surprising ways.
Evidence on how financial access affects households. The strengths and limitations of randomized control trials.
Innovation requires understanding tradeoffs in commercialization, price-setting, prudential regulation and efforts to protect the poor.
Members

What's New

read more
  • Jonathan Morduch at WWB Microfinance and the Capital Markets Conference
    Location: J.P. Morgan 383 Madison Avenue New York, New York 10017 To register visit: http://www.swwb.org/content/events/cmc2011
    Date: April 6, 2011

    11:15am-12:30pm Social Impact in Microfinance: What is the Research Telling Us?
    The microfinance industry and business model are constantly evaluated and challenged by various players,
    including governments, multilateral/bilateral agencies, donors, investors, researchers, and the press. Impact
    and effectiveness of microfinance are being tested using a wide variety of research techniques, including
    randomized controlled trials. This level of scrutiny is unprecedented in the social investments space and is
    made possible through the industry’s rigorous research community.
    • Is microfinance currently held to a higher standard of scrutiny relative to other social
    investments?
    • Are research pieces helping or hurting the case of microfinance? How can we use the rich
    information from findings to improve the business model and enhance the value proposition for
    clients?
    • Has the microfinance sector over-promised on its social goals? What is the call to action?

    Moderator: Jody Rasch, Moody’s
    Speakers: Jonathan Morduch, New York University; Nathanael Goldberg, Innovations for Poverty Action; Sharon Ravitch, University of Pennsylvania;and Ken Liffiton, MSC.

Blog

May 15, 2012
Commentary
Right Place, Right Time: The importance of workplace in financial action


May 8, 2012
Commentary
What’s wrong and what’s right about consumer finance?

Daniel RozasIt’s the microfinance bête noire.  The great unspeakable.  The furtive shadow slinking down the narrow alleys of poverty.  Yes, the consumer loan.  Has microfinance really come to this, we ask?  Helping the poor buy a TV?  Charging 40% interest for the couch to go in fro

May 2, 2012
Formality and Informality: Lessons from the new Findex Survey

Economist Jonathan MorduchThe Findex project helps to correct a long-standing im

May 1, 2012
Commentary
More Mysteries of Savings

Timothy Ogden, FAI Interim DirectorA lot of progress has been made in understanding the savings behavior of poor households over the last few years. A raft of new studies are beginning to appear that  promise to advance our understanding further.

April 25, 2012
Microinsurance: A Review of the Literature

In most of the developing world, the poor are disproportionately vulnerable to risk. Whether these risks come in the form of the death of a family member, severe illness, the loss of an asset such as livestock, or a natural disaster, these events have a particularly debilitating affect on the poor who are less able to financially absorb and recover from such shocks.

April 5, 2012
Commentary
What should regulators do?

Jonathan Morduch, Managing Director, FAIThere’s not enough academic research on the regulation of financial inclusion. Many of the questions might seem too applied for some researchminded economists, but that leaves regulators with few guideposts.

March 29, 2012
Commentary
Can increasing access enhance or jeopardize the stability of financial systems?

Regulators hope that expanding financial access will also provide greater stability to the overall financial system. This would occur as the market becomes larger and more diverse, and thus better able to withstand difficulties in any particular corner. The range of depositors would enlarge, as would the kinds of financial institutions in the market. Greater competition among providers would create pressure for quality competition.

March 27, 2012
Commentary
Can the expansion of microfinance add up to macro impacts?

Economist Jonathan MorduchThe most basic question is the micro one: whether microfinance typically yields notable impacts on the lives of low-income families. The logical follow-on is, to the extent that micro impacts emerge, how do those impacts

March 16, 2012
Links We Like

A sampling of what we've been reading this week from around the web:

Background

The Financial Access Initiative (FAI) is a research center based at NYU Wagner focused on substantially expanding access to quality financial services for low-income individuals

Financial access holds the promise to help low-income individuals in developing countries manage their economic lives and build wealth. The Initiative aims to provide rigorous research on the impacts of financial access and on innovative ways to improve access.

The Initiative was launched with funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and American International Group, Inc. to the NYU Wagner Graduate School. Research by FAI researchers is also supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation, the Ford Foundation, The World Bank, CGAP, and other organizations.