DR Elizabeth Hull eh17@soas.ac.uk
Senior Lecturer
Banking in the bush: waiting for credit in South Africa's rural economy
Hull, Elizabeth
Authors
Abstract
Drawing on fieldwork in a rural area of KwaZulu-Natal, this paper shows how people experience government and other institutions in a patchwork of encounters spread out over time, disjointedly, and via various intermediaries. Aspirations change over time and in response to these encounters. Specifically, the paper focuses on the setting up of a government regulated microfinance institution. I consider the divergence between state-led models of ‘entrepreneurship’ and the practice of individuals’ engagement with the organisation and their own expectations about it. One government stipulation was that the bank demonstrated its effective operation through regular inflows and outflows of cash, prior to paying out any loans. As such, members were encouraged to invest money in order to qualify for a loan at a later stage. I describe the factors that enhanced or inhibited the willingness of members to invest in the bank, arguing that these strategies were influenced not only by existing levels of economic vulnerability experienced by individuals, but also by particular expectations of the bank, including its perceived reliability, stability and degree of formality vis-à-vis existing conceptions about banking. The example demonstrates that processes of formalization are often partial and incomplete. Rather than examining them in the narrow terms of success or failure, the paper focuses on the intersection of moral and economic actions that emerge in the prolonged states of limbo that they create.
Citation
Hull, E. (2012). Banking in the bush: waiting for credit in South Africa's rural economy. Africa, 82(1), 168-186. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972011000702
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Publication Date | Feb 1, 2012 |
Deposit Date | Nov 23, 2011 |
Publicly Available Date | Jan 24, 2025 |
Print ISSN | 0001-9720 |
Electronic ISSN | 1750-0184 |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 82 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | 168-186 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972011000702 |
Keywords | South Africa, economic anthropology, microfinance, credit, informal economies, development |
Additional Information | References : Bähre, E. (2007) Money and Violence: Financial Self-Help Groups in a South African Township Leiden: Brill. Bank, L. J. & L. Qambata. (1999) No visible means of subsistence: rural livelihoods, gender and de-agrarianisation in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. Grahamstown: Institute of Social and Economic Research, Rhodes University and Leiden, The Netherlands: African Studies Centre Joint Working Paper. Bateman, M. (2010) Why Doesn’t Microfinance Work? the destructive rise of local neoliberalism. London: Zed Books. Bryceson, D. F. (2004) ‘Agrarian vista or vortex: African rural livelihood policies’, Review of African Political Economy 31 (102): 617-29. Day, C., P. Barron, F. Monticelli & E. Sello. (2009) District Health Barometer 2007/08. Health Systems Trust. http://www.hst.org.za/publications/850. Francis, E. (2000) Making a Living: changing livelihoods in rural Africa. London: Routledge. Gow, J. I. & C. Dufour. (2000) ‘Is the new public management a paradigm? does it matter?’, International Review of Administrative Sciences 66 (4): 573-98. Gupta, A. (1995) ‘Blurred boundaries: the discourse of corruption, the culture of politics, and the imagined state’, American Ethnologist 22 (2): 375-402. Guyer, J. (2004) Marginal Gains: monetary transactions in Atlantic Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Hart, K. (2010) ‘Informal Economy’ in The Human Economy: a citizen’s guide. (eds.) K. Hart, J Laville & A.D. Cattani. Cambridge: Polity. Hull, E. (2009) ‘Status, Morality and the Politics of Transformation: an ethnographic account of nurses in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa’. PhD dissertation. London School of Economics. --------- forthcoming. ‘Paperwork and the contradictions of accountability in a South African hospital’, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. James, D. (2007) Gaining Ground? “rights” and “property” in South African land reform. Oxon: Routledge-Cavendish. ----------- (2011) ‘The return of the broker: consensus, hierarchy, and choice in South African land reform’, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 17: 318-38. Marais, H. 2011. South Africa Pushed to the Limit: the political economy of change. London: Zed Books. Mosse, D. (2005) Cultivating Development: an ethnography of aid policy and practice. London: Pluto. Murray, C. (2000) ‘Changing livelihoods: the Free State, 1990s’, African Studies 59 (1): 115-42. Porteous, D. & E. Hazelhurst (2004) Banking On Change: democratizing finance in South Africa, 1994-2004 and beyond. Cape Town: Double Storey Books. Pottier, J. (1999) Anthropology of Food: the social dynamics of food security. Cambridge: Polity Press. Servet, J. M. (2010) ‘Microcredit’ in The Human Economy. K. Hart, J.L. Laville & A.D. Cattani (eds). Cambridge: Polity Press. Shipton, P. (2010) Credit Between Cultures: farmers, financiers, and misunderstanding in Africa. New Haven & London: Yale University Press. Sithole, P., A. Todes & A. Williamson. (2007) ‘Gender and women’s participation in municipality-driven development: IDP and project-level participation in Msinga, eThekwini and Hibiscus Coast’, Critical Dialogue 3 (1): 31-7. Thirtle, C., L. Beyers, Y. Ismael & J. Piesse. (2003) ‘Can GM-technologies help the poor? the impact of Bt Cotton in Makhathini Flats, KwaZulu-Natal’, World Development 31 (4): 717-32. Tsing, A. L. (2000) ‘Inside the economy of appearances’, Public Culture 12 (1): 115-44. Witt, H., R. Patel & M. Schnurr. (2006) ‘Can the poor help GM crops? technology, representation and cotton in the Makhathini Flats, South Africa’, Review of African Political Economy 109: 497- 513. |
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