This Paper Considers Leadership Choice In Community Groups. In Spite of an Enormous Assortment of Work Reporting What Electoral Frameworks Mean For Strategy Results, Less Is Thought About Their Effect on Leader Determination. We Think About Two Kinds of Participatory Dynamic In Ugandan Community Investment Funds Groups Vote By Secret Voting Form and Open Conversation With Agreement. Arbitrary Task of Electoral Standards Permits Us to Assess the Causal Effect of the Guidelines on Leader Types and Social Help Conveyance. We Find That Vote Groups Choose Leaders More Like the Normal Part While Conversation Bunch Leaders Are Emphatically Chosen on Financial Qualities. Further, the Dropout Rates Are Essentially Higher In Conversation Groups, Especially For Less Fortunate Individuals. After 3.5 Years, Vote Groups Are Bigger In Size and Their Individuals Save Less and Get More Modest Advances. We Presume That the Mysterious Voting Form Vote Makes More Comprehensive Groups While Open Conversation Groups Are More Selective and Favor the Monetarily Effective. the Proper Technique For Leader Determination Subsequently at Last Relies Upon the Goal and Target Gathering of the Program. Our Discoveries Offer Significant Commitments to the Writing on Leader Determination and to the Comprehension of Public Help Conveyance In Non-Industrial Nations.