MICROFINANCE AND WOMEN’S EMPOWERMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: TRENDS AND OUTCOMES

Despite decades of intervention, women across Sub-Saharan Africa continue to face systemic exclusion from formal financial systems, limiting their ability to participate fully in economic, social, and political domains. This paper examines how microfinance interventions between 2014 and 2024 have i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: JOSEPH OLORUNFEMI AKANDE
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Federal University Wukari 2025-08-01
Series:International Studies Journal
Online Access:https://wissjournals.com.ng/index.php/wiss/article/view/670
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Summary:Despite decades of intervention, women across Sub-Saharan Africa continue to face systemic exclusion from formal financial systems, limiting their ability to participate fully in economic, social, and political domains. This paper examines how microfinance interventions between 2014 and 2024 have influenced various dimensions of women’s empowerment across the region. Using a conceptual framework grounded in context-mechanism-outcome (CMO) logic, the study analyzes access to credit, savings behavior, digital financial inclusion, and gendered economic participation. It draws on national survey data, institutional databases, and regional trends presented in Tables 1 through 8. Findings show that while female labor force participation rose modestly from 62.1 percent in 2014 to 66.3 percent in 2024, formal credit access remains disproportionately low, with only 23 percent of women having access to microloans in 2024 compared to 41 percent for men. However, mobile money adoption among women increased from 11 percent to 47 percent over the same period, signaling a shift toward digital-led inclusion. Savings mobilization improved in countries with well-structured microfinance institutions, with Rwanda and Ghana outperforming regional averages by over 18 percentage points. The study recommends that regional financial inclusion policies prioritize digital microfinance platforms tailored for women, enforce gender-balanced governance in lending institutions, and integrate financial literacy into women-focused rural programs. By expanding access to adaptive and non-extractive microfinance models, Sub-Saharan Africa can unlock broader empowerment outcomes that extend beyond income generation to include voice, agency, and collective well-being.
ISSN:2756-4649