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Open Access 2016 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

Microfinance and Capacity Building in the EU Policy

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Microfinance instruments, in particular microcredit, play a key role in the implementation of the European strategies to support entrepreneurship, employment, social and financial inclusion.1,2 These instruments, in fact, can support start-ups through the provision of microloans characterised by simplified administrative procedures and absence of collateral requirements, offering to socially excluded and disadvantaged subjects an opportunity to ensure dignified living conditions for themselves and their households. The economic crisis that has hit the European economy in recent years resulted in high social costs that call for the adoption of specific measures to support the weakest segments of the population as well as effectively contribute to the economic recovery through the creation of new development opportunities. Today, individuals at risk are not just those outside the labour market due to disadvantaged conditions, but also other numerous subjects — young people, women, immigrants, off-workers, those ejected from the labour market — who, although in possession of professional skills, are unable to enter (or re-enter) the labour market due to a scarce demand for jobs by enterprises and the impossibility to access credit. In this context, the European Commission regards microcredit as a key instrument to fight unemployment and combat the new forms of poverty, to promote access to credit and, more generally, to financial services, a necessary condition to fully participate in the social and economic life of the community.

Metadata
Title
Microfinance and Capacity Building in the EU Policy
Copyright Year
2016
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-53602-0_4