2–5 Jun 2026
Europe/London timezone

Self-help and financialization: caste capitalism and marginalisation in rural India

3 Jun 2026, 10:45

Description

Self-help groups (SHGs) for rural women in India are integral parts of development policies such as the distribution of welfare schemes, building up of financial discipline, lending of microcredit, forging community support and solidarity, and helping them in finding work to earn living wages. However, the reality on the ground for Scheduled Caste (SC) women in rural India is quite the contrary. SHGs have not only failed to provide welfare benefits and decent work to the SC women in rural India, but it has also led to their increased indebtedness and worsening of socio-economic conditions. SHGs and microfinance groups act as convenient sites for banks and Microfinance Institutions in India to extend financialized debt. This process is more pronounced for the groups of Scheduled Caste women due to their precarious employment, lack of other opportunities for upward mobility, burden of socially reproductive labour, and discrimination from the state. Additionally, by making membership of SHGs a compulsory condition for receiving welfare benefits, the state plays a central role in trapping SC women in SHGs and allowing finance capital to use these as sites of accumulation. Based on 41 interviews conducted across 7 districts in the state of West Bengal, India, of a diverse range of participants, including Scheduled Caste women, Scheduled Tribe women, General Caste women, and representatives from the finance sector, this study examines how the state and financialized debt in rural India works in alliance to reproduce caste-based marginalisation for SC women while facilitating financial accumulation; a process that is termed as caste capitalism.

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