Community Group Saving and Lending (CGSL) mechanisms are widely promoted as a practical route to rural financial inclusion where formal banking services are weak, distant or too expensive for smallholder farmers. Yet a central policy question remains unresolved: can community lending groups remain financially sustainable after external facilitation, NGO supervision or donor-funded training ends? This article addresses that question through a cost-benefit analysis of CGSL mechanisms in Eastern Equatoria, South Sudan, with specific attention to Magwi County. Using survey evidence from the wider doctoral study on CGSL mechanisms in Eastern Equatoria, Jonglei and Lakes States, the paper re-analyses the Eastern Equatoria subset and compares it with cross-state patterns. The article treats cost-benefit analysis as an interpretive, perception-score proxy rather than an audited cash-flow statement, because the thesis data contain Likert-scale evidence on services, constraints, lending effects and agricultural outcomes rather than detailed group ledgers. The benefit side includes perceived access to credit, savings mobilisation, local capacity building, member management, productivity gains and poverty-reduction functions. The cost side includes working-capital scarcity, dependence on external facilitation, the need for government-donor collaboration, formal institutional reluctance, transaction costs associated with group management, and the weak availability of long-term capital. The findings show that Eastern Equatoria has a strong benefit index, driven by high agreement that rural finance improves productivity (mean = 4.61), that productivity rises through investment (mean = 4.54), that groups provide an alternative credit channel for the poor (mean = 4.43), and that savings are important for poverty reduction (mean = 4.57). However, the cost and risk exposure index is also high because respondents strongly reported scarcity of working capital (mean = 4.75), need for government-donor collaboration (mean = 4.54), and reluctance of formal institutions to serve rural areas (mean = 4.04). The resulting benefit-cost ratio is positive but modest, suggesting that self-supporting CGSLs are viable but institutionally fragile. The article argues that the future sustainability of Eastern Equatoria lending groups depends less on replacing external support immediately and more on converting external support into durable internal capacities: recordkeeping, loan discipline, member governance, savings growth, risk reserves and agricultural extension linkages.
Toch et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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