Los Angeles Microfinance Network

Fighting poverty in the world

Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Mid-2011 Welcome!

Posted by microfinance on July 19, 2011

WELCOME MICROFINANCE ENTHUSIASTS!

The Los Angeles Microfinance Network (LAMN) is officially jumpstarting itself into action.

LAMN is a resource for all those in the Los Angeles community who are interested in Microfinance. We stand as a volunteer organization that will increasingly provide outlets for those seeking to be involved in microfinance, to learn more about it (from core tenets to current criticisms), to engage the LA community with it, and to raise awareness of it as a tool for empowerment and eradicating poverty.

We will continue to provide regular speaking events and networking mixers so you can all connect with one another and ultimately bring a stronger presence of Microfinance to Southern California.

FOR THOSE WISHING TO BECOME OR REMAIN INVOLVED IN LAMN, PLEASE SEND AN E-MAIL TO: lamicrofinance@gmail.com AND KINDLY INCLUDE YOUR NAME, E-MAIL ADDRESS AND ANYTHING ELSE ABOUT YOURSELF, PERHAPS YOUR AFFILIATION (IF ANY) WITH MICROFINANCE.

YOU WILL THEN BE PLACED ON OUR MAILING LIST

There will be a meeting in the coming months, so be on the look-out for the invite!

Cheers,
Raheem Parpia
New LAMN President

 

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

InVenture One-Year Anniversary Party

Posted by krishna0701 on April 5, 2011

InVenture is hosting an anniversary party to celebrate the success of our first year and to give
a sneak peek of our new beta website.

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

‘To Catch a Dollar’ Film Screening on March 31st at the Culver Stadium

Posted by krishna0701 on March 25, 2011

Join the Los Angeles Microfinance Network for a special film screening of  ’To Catch a Dollar: Muhammad Yunus Banks on America’  at the Culver Stadium on Thursday, March 31st from 7:30 – 9:30 p.m.

The screening will include an in-depth panel discussion about innovative solutions to today’s financial challenges moderated by CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo featuring Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus with special guests Financial Powerhouse Suze Orman and Kiva.org President Premal Shah. Appearances by Hugh Jackman, Matt Damon, Robert DeNiro and many more.

Pledge to see the film and watch the trailer at:
http://www.facebook.com/tocatchadollar

Tickets are $11.75 and can be purchased at:
http://www.screenvision.com/s/showing/ToCatchADollar/

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

YAO LA Spring Swing Event

Posted by krishna0701 on March 15, 2011

Come join us for YAO’s Spring Swing Event on Saturday April 2 at 8PM at The Olympic Collection Banquet Center

We’ll be providing free swing dance instruction, great music, the opportunity to meet new people and win fun prizes!

Also, you’ll hear stories of hope from an international guest speaker from Uganda.

Tickets are $20 online or $25 at the door. Proceeds will go to our microfinance clients.

For more information and to buy tickets go to http://www.opportunity.org/young-ambassadors-for-opportunity/events/spring-swing/

We look forward to seeing you there!
Date: Saturday, April 2 at 8:00pm
Location: The Olympic Collection Banquet Center, 11301 Olympic Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90064
About YAO-LA: Young Ambassadors for Opportunity (YAO) is a network of passionate, globally-minded young professionals who are dedicated to alleviating poverty through microfinance, with a special focus on supporting Opportunity International’s http://www.opportunity.org/ work in Tanzania. Young ambassadors inspire, educate and involve others in the work of Opportunity International.

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

The Battle for Grameen

Posted by krishna0701 on March 10, 2011

Attacks on the sainted Muhammad Yunus escalate

Mar 3rd 2011 | from the Economist print edition

FIRST, trenchant criticism. Late last year Bangladesh’s prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, accused Muhammad Yunus, the founder and managing director of Grameen, the world’s best-known microfinance institution, of playing “a trick” to evade taxes. Then, broad hints that Mr Yunus might consider quitting: “At 70, Professor Yunus is five years beyond the retirement-age limit for bank managing directors in Bangladesh,” the finance minister said in February. Now, direct action. The country’s central bank wrote to Grameen’s board on March 2nd, informing it that Mr Yunus had been “relieved of his responsibilities as managing director of Grameen”.

read the rest of the article here:

http://www.economist.com/node/18285952?story_id=18285952

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

Microfinance USA 2011 in New York City this May 23 -24

Posted by krishna0701 on February 5, 2011

ACCION USA, Opportunity Fund, and Kiva bring you the Microfinance USA 2011 Conference this May 23-24 in New York City!

If you’re a microfinance enthusiast, this conference is not to be missed. Microfinance USA provides a unique setting for networking and learning from the industry’s top practitioners, funders, and researchers.
Over two days, you can:

  • Attended plenary sessions and panels led by the nation’s leading microfinance voices.
  • Experience microfinance first-hand by touring local microenterprises in New York.
  • Debate current microfinance topics during small group sessions and networking dinners.
  • Network with the leading practitioners and researchers in the U.S. microfinance field.

Topics at this year’s conference include:

  • What IS microfinance? – debating and defining our terminology
  • Social Entrepreneurship and Microfinance
  • Student-Powered Microfinance Institutions: How Does it Work?

To see this year’s agenda and to learn more, visit:www.microfinanceusaconference.org

 

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

Spring 2011 Introductory Course on Microfinance

Posted by krishna0701 on February 5, 2011

‘Financial Services for the Poor’ Professional Training Programme

Spring 2011 Introductory Course on Microfinance

Organized by Alliance Forum Foundation, BRAC University

The ‘Financial Services for the Poor’ Professional Training Programme will be held in Bangladesh from April 22nd to May 4th 2011. This unique course combines classroom instruction and lectures with observational visits to microfinance institutions (MFI) in the field to provide participants with a holistic understanding of microfinance grounded in the experience of Bangladesh.

The ten day course will be lead by Dr. Syed M. Hashemi, Director of the Development Institute of BRAC University and Senior Microfinance Specialist of CGAP (Consultative Group to Assist the Poor), as well as, leading practitioners and academics from across the field of microfinance. Observational visits will be made to a number of NGOs including BRAC, Grameen Bank, SafeSave, and ASA for participants to better understand microfinance in practice.

The course fee of $2,700 includes tuition, lodging, local transportation to field visits, and course materials. Airfare, visa costs, fuel surcharge, etc. are not included and participants are responsible for arranging their own travel to Bangladesh.

Course participation is limited to around 20 participants. Highly motivated individuals with a strong interest in pursuing a career in international development or microfinance should apply by the February 19th 2011 deadline.

For further information or to download an application form, please visit: http://www.allianceforum.org/en/mfinfo_en.html

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

Sacrificing Microcredit for Megaprofits by Muhammad Yunus

Posted by rhsharma on January 15, 2011

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/15/opinion/15yunus.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print

Posted in News | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

This week in microfinance

Posted by krishna0701 on December 13, 2010

As many of you know, there has been a lot of press coverage on SKS Microfinance and the regulatory role of the Reserve Bank of India.  Here are some noteworthy updates on this development

 

RBI to Weigh In on Microfinance Lending
Wall Street Journal
By SUBHADIP SIRCAR and NUPUR ACHARYA KOLKATA—The Reserve Bank of India will soon consult bankers to ensure lending by microfinance institutions isn’t 
See all stories on this topic »
 

Microfinance pioneer Yunus criticises Indian lenders
AFP
DHAKA — Bangladeshi microfinance pioneer Muhammad Yunus on Sunday attacked companies for “misusing and abusing” his original concept of helping poor people 
See all stories on this topic »

 

Govt to review fund-raising by MFIs
Times of India
NEW DELHI: The government does not appear to be keen on unbridled growth of microfinanceinstitutions (MFIs) and wants a review of the fund-raising plans of 
See all stories on this topic »

 

Microfinance pioneer Yunus cleared in aid probe
AFP
DHAKA — Microfinance pioneer Grameen Bank on Wednesday welcomed a report by Norway that cleared its founder Muhammad Yunus of misusing aid money, 
See all stories on this topic »

 

Microfinance Loses its Wall Street Luster
TheStreet.com
Microfinance refers to the provision of tiny loans to poor people in third world countries. Though interest rates can climb beyond 100% in certain cases, 
See all stories on this topic »

 

Microfinance: Is Grameen Founder Muhammad Yunus a Bloodsucker of the Poor?
Wall Street Journal (blog)
has achieved celebrity status on The Simpsons and acclaim for efforts to alleviate poverty throughmicrofinance–small loans–to the poor in Bangladesh. 
See all stories on this topic »

 

India Rocked By Microfinance Crisis
NPR
India’s nearly four billion dollar microfinance industry is facing collapse after politicians in one of the country’s largest states called on borrowers to 
See all stories on this topic »

 
 

India’s Microfinance Blues
Newsweek
Last month’s $221 million rescue loan to a group of troubled Indian microfinance companies—with some $2 billion on the line, nearly eight of 10 borrowers 
See all stories on this topic »

 

Posted in News | 1 Comment »

Underwriting webinar through Accion and Opportunity Fund on Dec 1, 2010

Posted by krishna0701 on November 25, 2010

Hear from senior loan underwriters at two of the nation’s leading microlenders. In anticipation of the Microfinance USA 2011 Conference, please join Neil Boss, Senior Underwriter at ACCION USA and William Cardenas, Senior Loan Consultant at Opportunity Fund for an early pre-conference Webinar. Boss and Cardenas will present case studies on recent loan approvals that exhibit common strengths and weaknesses, and each will discuss some of the internal processes (and the evolution of processes) that have lead to improved and quicker loan decisions. There will be 15 minutes for Q&A with webinar participants. Join us to see microfinance from the inside!

Click the following link to learn more

http://www.mficonnect.com/events/event/show?id=2179986%3AEvent%3A11664

 

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

Kickoff to Global Entrepreneurship Week happening TONIGHT, 11/10/2010

Posted by krishna0701 on November 10, 2010

An invitation from our friends at the InVenture Fund…

Posted in News | 1 Comment »

Local students or campuses interested in the Berkeley Microfinance Simulcast

Posted by krishna0701 on November 7, 2010

The Berkeley Microfinance Simulcast is a live webcasted microfinance class offered at top colleges and universities in the United States.

Basically, all we need is a local campus contact willing to organize a room on campus, market the class to students to put in the room, and then show up for class and manage the chat room.  You can pursue campus credit for the class if you want, or treat it as a student run effort.  Our 50 campuses are all over the map.  This is a grass-roots effort, so we’re not picky as long as we reach students.


1) email sfoote@alethion.com and Julen Baztarrica julen_baztarrica@mba.berkeley.edu with your contact information and your willingness.  Congratulations!  you are now a Campus Coordinator.
2) find a classroom with an internet connection (hardwired) and projector.
3) participate in a technology test to make sure it’s working (sometime in September)
4) market the class to your campus (consistent with whatever timing works for your campus)
5) Join in on the first day!

“In addition to lectures from me, Sean Foote, you also get speakers.  Prior speakers have included the heads of Grameen, Compartamos, Kiva.org, Microplace, UNITUS, Freedom From Hunger, Prisma Microfinance, Elevar Capital . . . . “

If you’re in the class, make sure to join the Berkeley Microfinance Group to interact with classmates, participate in discussions, and access course documents.

more information: http://www.mficonnect.com/page/berkeley-microfinance

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

Microfinance Networking Night ~ November 2, 2010

Posted by krishna0701 on October 22, 2010

Microfinance Networking Night

Join us for some food, drinks, and networking hosted by the Los Angeles Microfinance Network, InVenture, and Wokai at Happy Endings in West LA

When: Tuesday, Nov 2, 2010 from 7pm to 10pm

Where: Happy Endings Bar & Restaurant

7038 West Sunset Boulevard
Hollywood, CA 90028

InVenture

InVenture is the first online platform enabling individuals to invest directly in business owners in developing communities. Our mission is to empower business owners across the globe to lift themselves and their communities out of poverty

Wokai

Wokai is the first person-to-person internet platform that allows you to provide rural entrepreneurs in China with loan capital. You choose the borrower you want to support, make a tax-deductible contribution, and watch their repayments and progress over time.

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

Pepperdine University Convocation with guest speaker from Opportunity International

Posted by leecrystale on October 19, 2010

Pepperdine University Convocation with guest speaker from Opportunity International

Learn more about the impact of microfinance as a working solution to global poverty. Opportunity International microfinance organization with guest speaker Susan Chunda, Opportunity banker in Malawi, will be discussing innovative and sustainable microfinance projects that work towards alleviating chronic poverty.


When:

Tuesday, Nov 16, 2010

6:30-7:30pm


Where:

Pepperdine University, Elkins Auditorium

24255 Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu, CA 90263

*Please note that parking is on first come first serve basis. We recommend arriving early in order to secure a spot.


Bring a friend and hope to see you there!


Sincerely,

the YAO LA Chapter



Learn More:

http://www.opportunity.org/young-ambassadors-for-opportunity/

~~~~

Guest Speaker Bio:

Susan Chunda joined Opportunity International Bank of Malawi (OIBM) in 2008 as a Micro Banking Loan Officer and was later promoted to a Small Medium Enterprise (SME) Officer. She currently manages a portfolio of 55 clients valued at 39 million Malawian kwacha (over $250,000 US dollars) with 0% average portfolio at risk (PAR). Susan was awarded a certificate of recognition as one of the best performers in SME loans during the first half of 2009. Susan “enjoys being a vessel of bringing knowledge and empowerment to active Malawians who are doing small scale business through giving out loans, business management advice and spiritual advice.” She attended MIREC College where she did computer programming and later went to ShareWorld Open University where she graduated with a diploma in Business Administration.

 

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

Simpsons and Microfinance

Posted by rhsharma on October 7, 2010

Last Sunday’s Simpsons had a microfinance themed episode featuring Mohammad Yunus.
Catch it here if you missed it: http://www.hulu.com/watch/181121/the-simpsons-loan-a-lisa

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

Online Event: Microfinance and Health Oct 5,6

Posted by rhsharma on October 5, 2010

Please join us October 5-6 for an online Speakers Corner discussion, “Why Integrate Microfinance and Health Services?”. This activity is hosted jointly by the USAID Microenterprise Development office and facilitated by Freedom from Hunger and the Microcredit Summit Campaign. Visit www.microlinks.org/mfhealth to join the discussion!

Posted in events, News | Leave a Comment »

Funding the Risk Frontier in Microfinance

Posted by krishna0701 on September 16, 2010

Elisabeth Rhyne

Managing Director, Center for Financial Inclusion

Posted: September 13, 2010 05:34 PM

The recent IPO of SKS Microfinance, India’s largest microfinance institution (MFI), was a watershed event whose ripples are affecting the public perception of microfinance. When an organization originally founded as a nonprofit first attracts some $75 million in successive waves of private equity capital and then raises $358 million in a public offering of stock, it seems natural to ask: Is there any remaining role for donor funding — or for nonprofit engagement — in this industry?

Despite the fanfare associated with public listings that attract commercial money into microfinance, only a handful of the largest MFIs are traded on stock exchanges. Moreover, outside the MFIs’ home exchanges (Mexico for Compartamos, Kenya for Equity Bank, or India for SKS) these shares are generally only available to institutional investors. The vast bulk of the microfinance industry relies on socially motivated funding in a mix that includes grants, loans and equity investments. Anyone who wants to support microfinance can select from a multi-hued array of funding opportunities to find one that matches his or her wishes.

For those who want to lend their money and get it back, there are socially responsible investment funds like Microplace, Calvert Foundation and Kiva. They specialize in microfinance and pursue a double social and financial bottom line. These funds often select a financial return target that varies depending on how socially focused they want to be. If these funds track the social performance of their portfolio companies along dimensions like client poverty levels, transparency, and responsibility to consumers, investors gain confidence that their money is being used as desired.

For grant makers, there are nonprofit organizations — like ACCION (disclosure, my employer), Opportunity International and Grameen Foundation — devoted to starting and growing MFIs that maintain a social mission. While such organizations share many aspects of best practice in microfinance, each one brings a unique development philosophy and emphasis, which allows prospective supporters to find the best fit.

With all the choices, how can a donor or investor interested in microfinance decide?

Let’s assume three kinds of funds: straight commercial funds that obey the rules of the marketplace, social investment funds that explicitly combine social and financial aims, and pure grants. Each has its own niche. Two closely related decision rules suffice to sort out their different roles.

• Rule One. If the market can fund it, let it.
• Rule Two. For grant makers, find the frontier and help push it out.

These rules come from the reality that grants and social investments are scarce and need to be deployed where they will make the most difference. It helps to think back to the late 1980s when the U.S. Agency for International Development and the InterAmerican Development Bank together invested something less than $5 million to help ACCION launch Prodem, the precursor of BancoSol in Bolivia. Today, BancoSol is a commercial bank with a loan portfolio of $340 million, serving 127,000 borrowers and 254,000 savers. It would not make much sense give BancoSol a grant to cover operating expense or loan capital today. Both the bank and the microfinance field have evolved. In response, donor support has evolved — and needs to keep evolving. Today’s challenge is to figure out where today’s industry frontiers actually lie. Below, a brief roadmap.

At the absolute frontier, grant funding is needed. The unfilled needs are many:

• Microfinance services for marginal groups, including rural and remote populations, the disabled and others who have not yet been served with commercial models. For example, BRAC and Grameen Bank in Bangladesh support urban beggars while CARE and Oxfam create savings groups in sparsely populated rural Africa.
• R&D to develop new products like savings, microinsurance and specialty credit products (like loans for renewable energy, home improvement or education¬).
• R&D to apply new technologies to bring services closer to clients.
• Capacity building for MFIs in countries where microfinance is lagging, such as in
central Africa.
• Development of the “infrastructure” that keeps the industry healthy, such as credit bureaus and client protection.
• Financial education for clients.

There’s a second frontier that I call the risk frontier. This is the home of social investment. The risk frontier includes institutions that operate profitably but are still viewed as risky by the market, either because they are young, or are operating in difficult environments, or are testing the commercial viability of new products or client groups. There are dozens or possibly hundreds of MFIs in this category, often known as second and third tier MFIs. Also in this group are top tier MFIs that operate in frontier markets. For example, because Bolivia is regarded as a risky setting, BancoSol still works with social investors to raise debt and equity.

Off the frontier, the market can take it away. Commercial sources can now supply much of the debt and equity in top tier MFIs, either directly or through specialized microfinance investment funds. And even for second tier MFIs, especially in less risky countries, much of the debt finance can be purely commercial. Many MFIs work with a blend of pure commercial and social investors. And finally, profitable MFIs that become licensed banks, can increasingly be funded locally through deposits — an important and fully commercial source.

Microfinance is about building in a future in which the world’s poor have access to financial services. Individual donors and investors, as well as those controlling public or institutional capital, need to balance their assessment of social impact with their needs for investment returns and risk. Like any other donation or investment, a little research and due diligence beforehand can bring assurance that funders and those they entrust with their money share the same goals.

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

Wokai’s response to Milton Bateman’s book: Why Doesn’t Microfinance Work? The Destructive Rise of Local Neoliberalism

Posted by leecrystale on August 24, 2010

Wokai’s response to Milton Bateman’s book: Why Doesn’t Microfinance Work? The Destructive Rise of Local Neoliberalism
August 19, 2010
Author: Jon Wyler

This post was written by Liz Blase from Wokai HQ in San Francisco

Milton Bateman, in his new book ‘Why Doesn’t Microfinance Work? The Destructive Rise of Local Neoliberalism’ - posits several critiques of microfinance and the impact that it has had over the last 30-40 years:

“[Microfinance] provides scarce financial support to tiny businesses that don’t have a chance at getting bigger or making a difference.”
“The microfinance industry thinks there is a quick fix to development through tiny businesses, and I think that is fundamentally wrong. Sustainable development costs money and it takes time.”
“The problem with microfinance is that as much as 90%-95% of microenterprises fail over five years, and of the ones that succeed, very few become large enough to sustain a larger development agenda. We are simply not creating the businesses of tomorrow.”

We very much appreciate the critique of Bateman—open discussion about impact and methodology is critical to progress and advancement in every industry. Particularly in microfinance, such a call to action for our industry to articulate its standards of success is notable. The still nascent microfinance field has few such benchmarks at this point in its history.

However, based on our experience in the China microfinance sector, we disagree with Bateman in several of his points regarding the short and long term impacts of microfinance and want to make known the positive effects of this emerging industry in China.

Bateman’s points of view and strong call to action for the microfinance community, of which we are a member, are noteworthy and laudable in their articulation, however we must disagree with the disparagement of the short and long term effects of microfinance in the context with which we are most familiar: China. Wokai works with two field partners in rural China to redistribute contributions from individuals all around the world to entrepreneurs in Inner Mongolia and Sichuan in loans of around $500.

Microfinance is a young sector globally (particularly young in China); yet, in our experience, these questions of impact, accountability and efficiency are not without positive answers. The track record of Wokai’s borrowers shows that microfinance has had extremely positive effects—monetarily and socially—in both the long and short term.

…continued at http://wokai.org/blog/2170/

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

Posted by microfinance on July 14, 2010

Article grabbed from here

Women’s World Banking Brings Credit To The Third World

Knowledge@Wharton , 07.12.10, 10:58 AM EDT

Chief Executive Mary Ellen Iskenderian discusses WWB’s new microfinance model.

Mary Ellen Iskenderian remembers the moment when she discovered her purpose in life.
As a child, her parents often took her to visit her father’s family in Turkey where she saw, for the first time, people living in utter poverty. She remembers thinking, “I don’t want to spend my life looking the other way.”

She hasn’t. After graduating from Georgetown University and Yale with degrees in management and international finance, she worked for 17 years for Lehman Brothers ( LEHMQ news people ) and an affiliate of the World Bank–largely in eastern Europe and the Soviet Union–linking newly freed entrepreneurs with sources of capital. In 2006 she became president and CEO of New York City-based Women’s World Banking (WWB), a global network of 40 microfinance institutions and banks in 28 developing countries.

Committed to the “double bottom line” of financial returns and social progress, WWB offers credit, insurance and savings products that enable low-income women to build assets, guard against risk and provider better opportunities for their children. In the process, WWB enables its partners in microfinance to evolve from donor-dependent charities into self-sustaining financial institutions. “We know the poor can be economically savvy about juggling what little they have,” Iskenderian noted during a presentation at the recent 14th Annual Wharton Leadership Conference, whose theme was “Leading in a Recovering (and Even Rebounding) Economy.” “When someone trusts low-income women with capital, often for the first time, they can become agents of their own change.”

Mission Drift
In 2008 Women’s World Banking released a widely cited survey showing that if microfinance groups did not specifically target women, the percentage of female clients dropped sharply as the microfinance institutions evolved from donor-funded charities to regulated financial institutions. The phenomenon is called “mission drift,” and it occurs when organizations shift their focus toward higher-income (and supposedly less risky) clientele and away from low-income customers, which in many developing countries means women.

Iskenderian wants everyone to recognize the damage, unintended or not, caused by mission drift. Recently a WWB publication uncovered another effect that hurts women: As organizations shift their focus to for-profit services, a marked decline occurs in the number of female staff members who might better understand the needs of women entrepreneurs.

To illustrate this aspect of mission drift, WWB developed a tool called the Organizational Gender Assessment, which was launched with a large microfinance institution in Bangladesh called ASA. The OGA uncovered policies that clearly affected mothers employed at ASA, such as a requirement that staff members at all branch offices work late into the night managing loan recovery and overdue payments.

ASA regularly rotates its field staff among the branches as a way to prevent fraud. Yet while most male loan officers are not responsible for childcare, most of the women officers are. With the OGA survey in hand, ASA realized how its rotation policy was disrupting these women’s family lives. And after determining that rates of fraud were extremely low among its female staffers, ASA altered the transfer policy for certain women to allow them six years in one branch, rather than four.
The focus on mission drift among financial institutions comes at a time when a fierce worldwide debate is raging about microfinance and its future. In 2008 investors plowed $14.8 billion into microfinance, up 24% from the previous year. The microfinance industry now holds more than $60 billion in assets, according to The Center for Financial Inclusion. And, adds the World Bank, for the first time, most of the money in microfinance comes from private investors, including pension schemes and private equity funds, rather than governments. “There is definitely a risk of new shareholders switching microfinance institutions’ missions from alleviating poverty to chasing volumes and profits,” notes Maya Prabhu, head of philanthropy at the U.K. private bank Coutts & Co., who advises wealthy clients on investments in microfinance.

Falling into the ‘Red Zone’
Interest rates vary widely across the globe. But those that draw the most concern tend to occur in countries like Nigeria and Mexico, where the demand for small loans from a large population cannot be met by existing lenders, according to a recent article in the New York Times. The average interest rate in Mexico, for example, hovers around 70%, compared with a global average of roughly 37% in interest and fees. Mexican microfinance organizations can charge such rates because people are often so in need of cash that they will accept any terms offered to them. Occasionally, interest rates spark political intervention. In Nicaragua, President Daniel Ortega became outraged when rates began to reach 35% in 2008. He announced that he would back a microfinance institution that would charge 8% to 10%, using Venezuelan money.

Muhammad Yunus, a Bangladeshi banker and Nobel Peace Prize winner whom many experts regard as the founder of microfinance, has said that interest rates should be 10% to 15% above the cost of raising money, with anything beyond that range amounting to a “red zone” of loan sharking. Yet by that measure, 75% of microfinance institutions would fall into the red zone, according to a March 2010 analysis of 1,008 microlenders by the MIX, a website where more than 1,000 microfinance companies worldwide report their own numbers. Many experts label Yunus’ formula as overly simplistic and too low, and fear that a pronounced backlash against high interest rates will prompt lenders to retreat from the poorest customers.

Yunus is famous in the microfinance community for founding the Grameen Bank in his native Bangladesh. By 2006 the bank had disbursed more than $5.3 billion to borrowers, 96% of them groups of women. Yunus has said he decided to lend mainly to women because they were more responsible about repaying loans, and because families benefit more when women control the money.

The debate over microfinance and mission drift has intensified as some researchers maintain that there is more to developing an entrepreneur than providing credit. “Credit alone is not a panacea,” notes Jonathan Morduch, a professor of public policy and economics at New York University. “The boldest claim for microfinance–that it can single-handedly eliminate a large share of world poverty–outpaces, by a long distance, the evidence accumulated to date.” At the same time, however, analysts like Morduch emphasize the success of microfinance groups that combine lending with other initiatives, such as education and health care.

Charting a Path Forward
That model, as it turns out, is where Iskenderian is pushing WWB to go.

To put its stamp on what Iskenderian calls “the next 30 years” of microfinance, WWB is moving into a broad array of products and services for women, including savings, insurance and financial education. “Loans and credit was the model for the first 30 years of microfinance,” she stated. “Savings is the future, the missing piece in climbing out of poverty.” Currently WWB is sponsoring research on the use of mobile phone technology and ATMs as ways to provide low-income women with banking services.

As another example, poor women have traditionally managed risk in very risky ways: by relying on their husbands, pulling children out of school to work, or selling productive assets such as livestock or equipment. WWB has published a paper highlighting alternative ways for women to manage such gambles using gender-sensitive microinsurance. For instance, women can choose another beneficiary if they don’t think their husbands will protect the children properly after the woman’s death. In Colombia the life insurance offered by one company pays monthly benefits that can only be used for the purpose of educating the children for two years after the death of a parent, in order to reduce the pressure on the surviving parent to pull children out of school.

This year WWB announced that it has received an $8.5 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to research, develop and, in conjunction with four of its network member microfinance banks, offer products and services that will promote savings in Latin America, Africa and Asia. To educate the public about saving, a portion of the grant will support the creation of a “social soap opera” in the Dominican Republic. Because low-income women often tend to believe that saving small amounts of money in formal financial institutions is not worth the effort, notes WWB, the soap opera will feature stories highlighting responsible management of money. WWB will work on the project with Puntos de Encuentro, a Nicaraguan NGO with experience in using TV serial dramas to change cultural attitudes.

Through the soap opera, WWB will not only illustrate both positive and negative money management practices–and the consequences of these actions–but will follow up with a communications campaign that will use the buzz created by the soap opera to encourage people to save more money through formal bank accounts. If successful, the program could have a ripple effect across much of Latin America and the Caribbean.

“It’s not always size that makes the difference in [microfinance],” Iskenderian said. “People make the difference with their energy and their resolve. … Single individuals and the choices they make have a tremendous impact on the world.”

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

Lighting up Africa

Posted by microfinance on July 3, 2010

Lighting up Africa.

Article about how microfinance help provide lighting in rural Africa

Posted in News | Leave a Comment »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.