| Abstract: | The aim of this research is to examine if consumer microfinance reduces levels 
of financial exclusion in the UK and to explore its impact on social 
inclusion. Despite an abundance of research on microfinance, it is largely 
based on lending for enterprise, with a developing country focus. There is a 
dearth of research in Europe which this study addresses by looking at a 
consumer microfinance institution (MFI) in the UK and assessing its ability 
(or not) to promote social and financial inclusion. Furthermore, what little 
research has been carried out has concluded that UK consumer microfinance 
offers ‘insignificant’ benefit (Lenton and Mosley, 2012:87), however this 
was based on poverty reduction, not financial inclusion. This work fills the 
gap in knowledge regarding European consumer microfinance and contributes to 
its ongoing debate (Corbucci, 2016). This original research, which is based on 
new data, leads to a greater understanding of the topic hitherto under- 
studied which others can subsequently build upon.Grounded Theory (GT) 
methodology was used, focussing on in-depth interviews with 31 participants 
from a UK-based MFI. GT generates understanding in fields with little prior 
literature (Glaser and Strauss, 1967). It is especially apt for reaching the 
aims because it approaches the field with no a priori assumptions. Instead, it 
accesses the opinions and experiences from service users who are best placed 
to ascertain if they feel more or less financially included and why. Also, its 
core analytical tool ensures that findings are rooted in data which is useful 
to counteract the assertion that the design of most microfinance research is 
flawed because it is looking for positive social outcomes (Bateman, 2010).The 
main findings are that participants experienced considerable improvements in 
financial and social inclusion despite poverty-line incomes and poor credit 
scores thus improving financial capacity and money management. The majority of 
lending is used for consumer consumption which meets core social needs and 
contributes to ‘lead(ing) a normal social life in the society in which they 
belong’ (European Commission, 2008:9). This leads to a higher standard of 
living resulting in important mental and physical health improvements as well 
as increasing self-esteem. These results provide empirical evidence 
demonstrating microfinance’s ability to promote financial and social 
inclusion. The limitation of the results are that they are not generalizable 
because of sample size. But it could be extended to include customers from a 
range of consumer-lending MFIs in the United Kingdom and across Europe to 
ascertain if the findings can be replicated. These findings represent cutting 
edge research in an unexplored field of European microfinance so will make a 
significant contribution upon which others can build future impact studies. |