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Knowledge Paper #1 - The use of microcredit schemes in migrant reintegration context

Knowledge Paper #1 - The use of microcredit schemes in migrant reintegration context
Type
KMH Knowledge Paper Series
Country
Global
Region
Global
Organization
International Organization for Migration (IOM)
Year
2021
Publication Series
Sustainable Reintegration Knowledge Papers Series

This Knowledge Paper is the first issue of the Sustainable Reintegration Knowledge Papers Series published by the EU-IOM Knowledge Management Hub (KMH). 

Microfinance, and more specifically microcredit, is regularly mentioned by reintegration practitioners and experts when discussing avenues to strengthen the sustainability of migrants’ reintegration. Yet, very few migrant reintegration programmes have included microcredit schemes as a form of or as a complement to reintegration assistance. Microcredit appears to have significant advantages that could be leveraged to improve reintegration sustainability, and that plead for its inclusion in reintegration programming. By increasing the resources available to returnees and allowing them to access capital even in situations where they cannot meet the requirements set by traditional banks to access loans, microcredit seems particularly suitable to returning migrants. However, it is also increasingly criticized for some of its downsides, including its high interest rates.

This Knowledge Paper aims at providing leads to reintegration practitioners considering including a microcredit component in their programme, and more generally targets any individual involved in migrant reintegration (including at policy and programme design levels) and in microfinance (including microfinance institutions’ staff considering targeting returnees). It seeks to analyse how microcredit could be used in the context of migrant reintegration programmes and to address the following questions:
 

  • Does  microcredit  constitute  a  valid  alternative  or  complement  to  reintegration  grants  usually  provided  in  the  framework  of  reintegration  programmes? If  so,  in  which  contexts  or  under  which  conditions  can  it  be  envisaged? 
  • What  are  the  key  considerations to take into account when designing and implementing interventions linking microcredit to migrant reintegration?
  • And what can reintegration organizations do to facilitate returning migrants’ access to microcredit, if relevant?