Social Networks and Financial Exclusion in Australia: Experiences with Microfinance and Life Outside the Mainstream
Abstract
Financial exclusion has become increasingly prevalent in
Australia. While solutions to this challenging social policy
problem have, thus far, tended to focus on addressing financial
market failures, this thesis looks instead at the role social
relations can play in assisting individuals overcome financial
exclusion. The discussion is framed by an extensive body of
literature pointing to the valuable instrumental benefits that
can flow from social capital and social networks. This thesis
begins by tracing the intellectual history of these concepts and
then specifically examines the role of social networks in
addressing financial exclusion.
Through a series of semi-structured interviews with a group of
financially excluded people in Melbourne and Canberra, this
thesis will provide a better understanding of the lived
experience of financial exclusion. Research participants were
drawn from the client base of an innovative Australian
microfinance program, the ‘No Interest Loan Scheme’.
Importantly, evidence was also collected on the positive impact
such microfinance programs can have in both promoting financial
inclusion and improving the lives of their clients. The
definition of financial exclusion used in this thesis centred on
the inability to access affordable and appropriate credit. Using
this definition, I was able to document how financial exclusion,
including its social consequences, manifested for the
participants in my study. High degrees of exclusion from the
mainstream financial system and the use of the fringe credit
market emerged as recurrent themes amongst participants. Social
distance was identified as a key source of exclusion.
The types of social networks that the research participants had
were documented and a picture emerged of how social support, when
it was available, could be drawn upon to help mitigate exclusion.
The way that social networks help or hinder financial exclusion
was also considered. Significantly, a comprehensive examination
of this nature into the social networks of financially excluded
people in Australia had not been conducted before, so this thesis
makes an important contribution to the literature. In particular,
my findings serve to further validate the benefits associated
with social capital and deliver new insights into the content and
quality of social relations in Australia.
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