Microfinance lending and women empowerment in Nakuru county informal settlement in Kenya
Date
2025
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
KCA University
Abstract
This study explored the effect of microfinance lending on women empowerment in the slums of
Nakuru County, Kenya. The focus was on four microfinance service components: institutional
lending services, saving services, micro insurance services, and financial training, and their
relationship to economic, social, and psychological dimensions of women's empowerment. The
study adopted a descriptive survey design targeting women aged 18-60 years residing in selected
slum areas of Nakuru County who were current or potential beneficiaries of microfinance services.
From a target population of 400 women, a sample of 200 respondents was selected using simple
random sampling from Kivumbini slums of Nakuru, achieving a high response rate with completed
questionnaires. Data was collected using structured questionnaires with closed-ended questions
employing a 5-point Likert scale. The questionnaire consisted of six sections covering
demographic characteristics and the five study variables. Data analysis involved both descriptive
and inferential statistics, with descriptive statistics including frequencies, percentages, means, and
standard deviations to summarize respondent characteristics and variable distributions. Inferential
statistics employed Pearson correlation analysis to examine relationships between variables and
multiple regression analysis to determine the predictive power of institutional lending services,
saving services, micro insurance services, and financial training on women empowerment.
Diagnostic tests including multicollinearity, heteroscedasticity, and normality tests were
conducted to ensure data met regression assumptions. The results revealed that all microfinance
services had significant positive relationships with women empowerment, with lending services
showing the strongest correlation (r = 0.779), followed by saving services (r = 0.776),
microinsurance services (r = 0.768), and financial training (r = 0.732). The regression model
demonstrated substantial explanatory power (R² = 0.723, F = 118.033, p < 0.05), with lending
services being the strongest predictor of women empowerment (β = 0.275, t = 3.920, p < 0.05),
followed by saving services (β = 0.245, t = 3.405, p < 0.05), microinsurance services (β = 0.244, t
= 3.561, p < 0.05), and financial training (β = 0.180, t = 2.803, p < 0.05) respectively. The study
concluded that microfinance services significantly contribute to women empowerment, though
challenges exist regarding affordability and accessibility. The study recommended that
microfinance institutions should redesign products to address affordability concerns, strengthen
financial literacy programs, improve microinsurance awareness, and expand training availability.
The findings provided evidence-based insights for policymakers, microfinance institutions, and
development practitioners on optimizing microfinance services to enhance women's empowerment
in urban slum contexts.