“…Despite being badges as ‘gender‐neutral’, MFIs' core clients are relatively immobile, poor women who tend to have lower default rates than men (Lucy, Ghosh, & Kujawa, ); MFIs' interventions have significant but underreported economic impacts (Ardener, ; Van Rooyen, Stewart, & De Wet, ) as women work within households, are often unremunerated and accumulate limited start‐up capital (if any). MFIs have become increasingly risk averse and ‘financialised’, that is, they have become more like mainstream financial institutions (Brière & Szafarz, ). Nonetheless, MFIs do in some cases support women to establish new business ventures and, therefore, alleviate their poverty, but not universally.…”