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Evaluation Review
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Evaluating Mission Drift in Microfinance

Lessons for Programs With Social Mission

Gaamaa Hishigsuren

Mennonite Economic Development Associates

The article contributes to a better understanding of implications of scaling up on the social mission of microfinance programs. It proposes a methodology to measure the extent, if any, to which a microfinance program with a poverty alleviation mission drifts away from its mission during rapid scaling up and presents findings from a field research using the proposed methodology at Activists for Social Alternatives (ASA), a microfinance organization that serves poor women in rural India. The findings indicate that mission drift is not a result of deliberate decisions by the management or board but rather is a result of the challenges posed by the scaling-up process. At times, changing trends in social outcomes were not obvious, and management was not aware of the changes indicated by the proposed measures of social performance.

Key Words: microfinance • mission drift • poverty alleviation • scaling up

Evaluation Review, Vol. 31, No. 3, 203-260 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0193841X06297886


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[Abstract] [PDF]