Institutional voids and informal finance: Theoretical insights for regulating village banking in low-income economies
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.51867/ajernet.7.1.67Mots-clés :
Financial Inclusion Policy, Institutional Bricolage, Institutional Theory, Sub-Saharan Africa, Village BankingRésumé
This conceptual paper explains how institutional voids in formal financial systems shape the rise and persistence of village banking in Zambia and across Sub-Saharan Africa, and it advances a policy approach that protects members without weakening the informal features that make these groups work. Drawing on a structured desk review of peer-reviewed studies, programme reports, and policy documents, the paper applies institutional theory and institutional bricolage to show how village banking groups “piece together” locally workable rules, enforcement practices, and safeguards using trust, social norms, and simple governance arrangements. The synthesis shows a consistent pattern: village banking provides accessible savings and credit, strengthens resilience for low-income households (especially women), and fills service gaps left by rigid, costly, or distant formal providers, but it remains exposed to fraud, weak record-keeping, and limited recourse because it operates outside formal oversight. The paper’s theoretical contribution is to reframe village banking as a legitimate institutional substitute (not a stopgap) and to explain its durability through bricolage processes that blend informal norms with selectively adopted “formal-like” controls (e.g., constitutions, social funds, and basic bookkeeping). The policy innovation is an adaptive, bottom-up financial inclusion policy design: tiered recognition, co-created minimum standards, and voluntary registration with light-touch oversight, enabling consumer protection and safer linkages to wider financial infrastructure while preserving autonomy and flexibility.
Téléchargements
Références
Bank of Zambia. (2020). Statement on village banking/savings groups. https://www.boz.zm/press_statement_on_village_banking_savings_groups.pdf
Burlando, A., Canidio, A., & Selby, R. (2021). The economics of savings groups. International Economic Review, 62(4), 1569-1598. https://doi.org/10.1111/iere.12526 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/iere.12526
Cleaver, F. (2012). Development through bricolage: Rethinking institutions for natural resource management. Routledge-Earthscan.
Dimaggio, P. J., & Powell, W. W. (1983). The iron cage revisited: Institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields. American Sociological Review, 48(2), 147-160. https://doi.org/10.2307/2095101 DOI: https://doi.org/10.2307/2095101
FINCA. (2025). Village banking. https://finca.org/our-work/microfinance/financial-services/village-banking
FinMark Trust. (2020). FinScope Zambia cooperating partners: 2020 survey report. https://www.boz.zm/FinScope-2020-Survey-Report.pdf
Flynn, J., & Sumberg, J. (2018). Are savings groups a livelihoods game changer for young people in Africa? Development in Practice, 28(1), 51-64. https://doi.org/10.1080/09614524.2018.1397102 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09614524.2018.1397102
Jarden, F., & Rahamatali, A. (2018). State of practice: Savings groups and the role of government in Sub-Saharan Africa. The SEEP Network; Financial Sector Deepening Africa (FSDA); Itad; CARE International. https://insights.careinternational.org.uk/media/k2/attachments/SEEP_Savings-Groups-and-the-Role-of-Government-in-SSA.pdf
Kahuthu, D. G. (2016). Impact of prudential regulation on financial performance of deposit taking savings and credit cooperative societies in Kenya (Doctoral dissertation, JKUAT).
Kalunga, P., Neene, V., Jere, E. B., Phiri, M., & Chembe, C. (2023). Challenges of crowdfunding (village banking) in Zambia: Solutions and opportunities. Zambia Information Communication Technology (ICT) Journal, 7(1), 38-46. https://doi.org/10.33260/zictjournal.v7i1.131 DOI: https://doi.org/10.33260/zictjournal.v7i1.131
Kartal, B. H. (2021). Formalizing the informal sector: Is it desirable for everyone? South African informal operators, bankers, researchers and policymakers elaborating on their understanding of formalization, and the way towards financial inclusion (Master's thesis, Umeå University, Sweden). Umeå University. https://www.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2%3A1575120
Laufer, H., Pietosi, S., & Rippey, P. (2019, December 11). Zooming in on informal savings mechanisms in Zambia: Final report. Oxford Policy Management; Mastercard Foundation; Financial Sector Deepening Zambia. https://www.opml.co.uk/sites/default/files/migrated_bolt_files/19-12-11-zooming-in-on-isms-in-zambia-sv2.pdf
Mukulu, J. B., & Qutieshat, A. (2022). Brief review of informal financial services typologies in Zambia: Investing in sustainable savings groups. Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences Studies, 3(12), 54-61. https://doi.org/10.32996/jhsss.2021.3.12.6 DOI: https://doi.org/10.32996/jhsss.2021.3.12.6
Mwansakilwa, C., Tembo, G., Zulu, M. M., & Wamulume, M. (2017). Village savings and loan associations and household welfare: Evidence from Eastern and Western Zambia. African Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics, 12(1), 85-97.
Palepu, K. G., & Khanna, T. (1998). Institutional voids and policy challenges in emerging markets. The Brown Journal of World Affairs, 5(1), 71-78. https://about.jstor.org/terms
Pearce, A., & Zulu, B. D. (2020). The impact of savings groups in uplifting the lives of rural women. https://www.scribd.com/document/896481829/The-Impact-of-Savings-Groups-in-Uplifting-the-Lives-of-Rural-Women
Pensiri, A. (2023). When self-organization meets formalization: An institutional analysis of savings group in Thailand (Doctoral dissertation, University of Bath). https://purehost.bath.ac.uk/ws/portalfiles/portal
Simatele, M., Dube, Z., Khumalo, S., Ssonko, G., Kawooya, D., Bwalya, M., Dlamini, P., Kichini, G., Kabange, M., Dlova, M., Mishi, S., Mushonga, F., Tshabalala, N., & Mutyavavi, T. (2021). Financial inclusion: Basic theories and empirical evidence from African countries (M. Simatele, Ed.). AOSIS Publishing.
https://doi.org/10.4102/aosis.2021.BK255 DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/aosis.2021.BK255
Sishumba, J., & Mulonda, M. (2019). Village banking: A feasible tool for accelerating financial inclusion for the unbanked poor communities in Zambia. Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences Studies, 1(6), 51-62. www.jhsss.org
The SEEP Network. (2018). State of practice report: Savings groups and the dynamics of inclusion. https://www.findevgateway.org/paper/2018/10/state-practice-savings-groups-and-dynamics-inclusion
Téléchargements
Publiée
Comment citer
Numéro
Rubrique
Licence
(c) Tous droits réservés Nzovwa Banda, Beatrice Matafwali, Austin Mwange 2026

Ce travail est disponible sous licence Creative Commons Attribution - Pas d’Utilisation Commerciale 4.0 International.













