May 22, 2013 08:47 UTC

learningenglish

Microcredit Is Expanding to New Products for the Poor

Muhammad Yunus has his picture taken with students at a technical school in Port-au-Prince, Haiti last year.  The school received a loan from a group headed by Mr. Yunus to help build social businesses.
Muhammad Yunus has his picture taken with students at a technical school in Port-au-Prince, Haiti last year. The school received a loan from a group headed by Mr. Yunus to help build social businesses.
TEXT SIZE - +


This is the VOA Special English Economics Report.

Modern microfinance started with economist Muhammad Yunus. In the nineteen seventies, he started what became the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh. He and the bank jointly won the Nobel Peace Prize in two thousand six for the idea of offering small loans to the poor to fight poverty.

Last month, Mr. Yunus spoke to the New York Times newspaper about lending problems in India. In twenty ten, reports of harmful microlending methods and corruption shook the state of Andhra Pradesh. Mr. Yunus noted Andhra Pradesh had intensive microlending activity at the time. He said things got out of control.

We spoke to Ghiyath Nakshbendi about changes in the world of microfinance. He is an expert in international business and teaches microfinance as a business model at the Kogod School of Business at American University.

GHIYATH NAKSHBENDI: “After what we witnessed in Andhra Pradesh, then, for example, the government of India in certain states started taking steps in order to implement, in order to introduce, regulations that will guarantee that these institutions are operating under a strict system.”

Some experts have raised questions about whether microlending lifts women or poor families out of poverty. David Roodman is with the Center for Global Development, a research group in Washington. He says microloans do not do a good job of fighting poverty. He says over three billion dollars went into microcredit in twenty-ten. But many lenders failed because of bad supervision or failure to repay loans.

In one model, governments or nongovernmental organizations, NGOs, give money to microcredit operations. Interest income is often used up by costs, rather than helping other poor borrowers. But Ghiyath Nakshbendi says that model is changing.

GHIYATH NAKSHBENDI: “In the old days, when we talk about microfinance, we are talking about an operation by which the funding is coming from wealthy individuals or government, or what have you. So it is the NGO model. Then we discovered that whatever we are getting in terms of contributions, donations and what have you -- we cannot sustain the operation.”

Mr. Nakshbendi says sustainability is now a main goal.

GHIYATH NAKSHBENDI: “We moved in the last five, six years to find ways and means by which make these operations sustainable. Sustainable means simply that, ‘Yes, we are going to rely on donations, but in the meantime, we are going to encourage these borrowers to save some of their money.’”

Money from savings can then be used for new loans. Mr. Nakshbendi says private equity companies are looking closely at microfinance as an investment. New models are being developed to offer more than business loans.

GHIYATH NAKSHBENDI: “And now in microfinance we talk about loans to start a business. We are talking about educational loans. We are talking about construction loans. We are talking about health insurance loans and what have you.”

And that's the VOA Special English Economics Report. I’m June Simms.

____

This report was written by Mario Ritter who carried out the interview.

This forum has been closed.
Comment Sorting
Comments
     
by: phon sophat
04/18/2012 1:45 AM
I think that microfinance is very playing role in growth economic in Country and reduction of poverty like in Cambodia too.please Investors invest in Cambodia more and more in micro and Bank to maintain sustanable growth in society.the more important is banning to financial crisis in the world too.


by: hougong
04/13/2012 9:07 AM
thank you very much!


by: Michael Fan
04/02/2012 1:12 AM
Well, in China, we also need this model. The real situatiion in China now the gap between the rich and the poor became bigger and bigger. We surely need this new model to help the poor.


by: Abdullah Muhammad
03/27/2012 3:23 PM
Muhammad Yunus and that bank are deserved to get that nobel peace prize.. i wish to see some African economists taking same path of yunus..


by: ehsanulah salih
03/27/2012 1:44 AM
ilike PDF for every story and thanks voa for your update news. i like VOA much . interpreter with U.S army from afghanistan.........................apreciated


by: Dame
03/26/2012 11:58 PM
Yunus' concept is extremely useful for social development, particularly for people in developing countries. And that's we really need, not capitalism system that creats gap between the rich and poor ones.