Stuart Rutherford

Stuart Rutherford, the originator of the ‘financial diaries’ research methodology, is a researcher, writer, practitioner and teacher. His books "The Poor and Their Money" and the co-authored "Portfolios of the Poor" describe how poor people around the world manage their money. "The Pledge" tells the story of the emergence and growth of microfinance in Bangladesh, in the form of a biography of ASA, a major Bangladeshi microfinance organization. He has also written many journal articles.

As a practitioner Rutherford has tried to put into practice some of the ideas in his written work. In Bangladesh in 1996, he set up SafeSave, the world’s first microfinance organization aimed at helping poor people with basic money management (as opposed, say, to microenterprise development). He taught for several years at the Boulder Microfinance Training Course and at Southern New Hampshire, and is a Fellow at the Global Development Institute at the University of Manchester, UK. His consultancy clients include many local and international NGOs, bilateral and multinational donors, and philanthropic trusts like the Ford and Gates foundations.

Rutherford was educated at Cambridge University and the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London, but has lived most of his life abroad, including 16 years in Bangladesh. He is currently based in Japan, where his wife teaches at a development studies institute.

By Stuart Rutherford

Research

Household Interviews in Bangladesh, 2013

As part of research for the CGAP Focus Note "A Microcredit Crisis Averted: The Case of Bangladesh," by Greg Chen and Stuart Rutherford, Rutherford and S. K. Sinha interviewed 43 low-income rural Bangladeshi households.
Blog

Product Innovation that Provides Useful Services for the Poor

Mobile money’s first big success in serving poor people came when Kenyans discovered how useful it was to be able to “send money home” safely, quickly and cheaply through M-PESA. As mobile money moves from transfers into savings and loans, it will need to demonstrate a similar leap in the usefulness of its products.
Blog

Saving Up Is Hard to Do

The financial lives of the poor are dominated by the need to build usefully large sums of money for immediate expenditure.
Blog

Two Cautionary Tales from Bangladesh

For leaders who devised Bangladeshi’s microfinance miracle in the first place, adjusting staff instructions and realigning incentives to remove these foolish practices should be a piece of cake.
Research

Exploring Client Preferences in Microfinance

Microfinance products tend to be uniform across large geographic areas. For example, in Bangladesh most microfinance institutions (MFIs) offer some variant of the product pioneered by Grameen Bank—a loan with a term of about a year, repaid in frequent (usually weekly) installments, given in a group context, ostensibly for micro-enterprise use, and with a compulsory savings element.