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In order to grow and develop a micro business, just like any
other business, you need to have capital. But the formal
financial institutions, such as commercial banks, savings and
loan associations, finance companies, etc. have a tough time
figuring out how to lend to the poor. The prevalent philosophy
is that the poor don't have collateral guarantees for supporting
any kind of a loan program. Common belief is that of the poor as
not being credit worthy, or for that matter, of any capacity to
sustain credit . As well, current
belief is that of the poor having very little to offer in order
to obtain an otherwise very expensive small loan. It's not worth
the effort, bankers will say, as the amount of paperwork
necessary in order to give a large loan is the same as that for
a traditional small loan. Consequently, proportionate costs are
just not sustainable, or so will the "financially savvy" state.
As a consequence a poor business person will simply not be able
to access a mere $200 or $300 to sustain a micro business. A
secular knowledge states that a lot of the poor "don't have
enough resources to maintain any kind of legal business ". The
poor live from day to day, striving to obtain the basic family
needs, without hope to ever be able to breathe "a different kind
of air" .
The
idea behind the institutions that cater to the micro-entrepreneur
market is to provide the poor people access to the necessary
credit/capital in order to maintain their small businesses.
Microfinance does not mean "giveaway" or gift. Microfinance
does mean small loans, specifically designed as assistance to
poor families in order to support their breaking the vicious
circle of poverty.
The
effectiveness of microfinance as a tool in the battle against
poverty is by now a well known fact around the globe, both by
the multilateral institutions, as well as the political and
community leaders. Perhaps today's best known example of a
microfinance institution is that of "The Grameen
Bank " from Bangladesh, or as
otherwise known " Bank to the poor". During 1974, an economics
professor called Muhammad Yunus, now a Nobel peace prize
laureate individual, started a small credit project for poor
people in a rural village, close to the university where he
taught economics. Three decades later, the Grameen bank works in
more than 60,000 villages, and provides financial services to
more than 6 million poor families in Bangladesh. This "bank to
the poor” has made small loans for a total of over $5 billion
while maintaining a recuperation rate of over 98%. Recent
studies have shown that over 50% of those who become members of
the micro finance program held by the Grameen Bank, crossed the
line of poverty within five years of their having taken their
first loan .
Today
there are over 160 institutions in more than 40 countries
utilizing the Grameen bank micro
finance methodology , which has become the principal strategy in
the fight against global poverty.
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