Impact Monitoring and Impact Assessment in Microfinance
Programmes
Impact measurement seeks to measure and explain
induced changes that occur at the level of the target population in
terms of their quantity, quality, and direction and addresses how to
achieve meaningful programme results. In the context of microfinance,
the latter requires analysing programme results on the basis of
understanding the complexity, diversity, and contingency of the
livelihood of the rural and urban poor.
Are you a programme coordinator or project manager
responsible for initiating the monitoring process, for assessing
results, and organizing the presentation, dissemination and storage of
information? Or a practitioner, expert, consultant or researcher
conducting impact assessment and impact monitoring? You will learn which
methods to select in specific situations.
Have you asked yourself the questions "How can we
improve positive impact and promote transformation?" or questions
like:
In that case, the Guidelines for Impact Monitoring and
Assessment in Microfinance Programmes will assist you to:
-
Design impact monitoring and impact assessment
suited to prevailing contextual factors and objectives;
-
Build on and improve your existing M&E
procedures, and will help you understand and appraise the impact of
projects on human well-being (current M&E mainly focuses on
performance indicators such as financial and institutional
sustainability criteria);
-
Measure the effectiveness of microfinance
programmes according to key concepts in poverty reduction:
strengthening physical, human and social capital; increasing the
standard of living; improving access to and control over productive
resources; and enhancing knowledge about and participation in
individual rights and power;
-
Design a less-costly, application-orientated
M&E process that is context specific and provides reliable data;
-
Provide information for decision making, project
design and mid-term corrections by proving impact (accountability)
and improving intervention (project management);
-
Avoid undesirable or negative programme impact;
-
Identify various microfinance institution
stakeholders and make them more aware of their ownership;
-
Indicate necessary changes in microfinance
policies to ensure that efficient dissemination and transparency
exist between the project, the microfinance institution and the
donor; and,
-
Show donors the effectiveness of their input in
response to their goal to alleviate poverty.
Have a look to find out more about it!
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