Showing posts with label Grameen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grameen. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Breaking The Poverty Trap: Financial Services Edition

The Governor is on Project Syndicate, talking about financial inclusion (excerpt):

Financial Inclusion Now

KUALA LUMPUR – Making the financial system accessible to the world’s poorest people can unlock their economic potential, improve their lives, and benefit the wider economy. So it is no surprise that financial inclusion of the poor has become an important component of public policymaking. Central banks and regulators worldwide are taking the lead in making financial inclusion a priority, in addition to their traditional mandates of maintaining monetary and financial stability.

Monday, July 18, 2011

At The Feet Of A Master

I had a good time this weekend, professionally speaking that is. Why? Muhammad Yunus was in town to deliver a lecture. If you don’t know who he is, Prof Yunus is an economist who has devoted his life to helping the poor, pioneered microcredit in the 1970s, a firm advocate of women’s rights (no small thing in the highly patriarchal society of his homeland of Bangladesh), and the winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006. While he has no big presence academically, the pragmatic approach he took in dealing with poverty and its related issues sets a benchmark for effective poverty eradication policies, and not just ones that read well in the press.

The occasion was his appointment as “Nobel Laureate in Residence” at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia in Bangi, for which there was a big do last Friday, with the Minister of Higher Education in attendance. There was also a follow-up dialogue at UKM’s Faculty of Economics and Management the next day with a much smaller group. I’m already familiar with his work (and his books), so I learned nothing really new at either session. But the impact of hearing the same thoughts straight from this highly articulate man, with his very obvious passion and devotion to his calling, has a far greater impact than the written word.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Recommended Reading

I’m a big fan of audiobooks – there’s little better to pass the time in traffic jams than to listen to a good book or novel, especially with a talented narrator. I get all of mine from Audible.com, which also has the virtue of providing free of charge the audio version of the Wall Street Journal with some of its membership plans. Membership isn’t cheap, but if you read/listen as much as I do, then it pays for itself in the long run.

The latest book I’ve read (or is that listened to?), is Muhammed Yunus’ “Banker to the Poor: Micro-Lending and the Battle Against World Poverty”, which describes the founding of the Grameen project in Bangladesh and the success it has had in opening up access to credit and economic opportunities for the absolute poor.

Prior to Grameen, there was little the poor could do to improve their circumstances, especially under the conservative Muslim society – or to be more accurate, conservative patrician society – that existed in Bangladesh. Banks, as conventional banks do everywhere, were and are only interested in lending to those with collateral, rather than to those who have business ideas or have willingness to work. That’s a fairly common complaint I hear, and not just from the poor. What money the poor received was generally through charity or ill-run government projects, and didn’t harness the energy or the labour of the poor in any meaningful way – neither for the country nor for the poor themselves. Some of the stories of the poor, quite frankly, brought a lump to my throat.

But Grameen offered a way out of the poverty trap, albeit one that depended on one’s own willingness to take a chance. By offering tiny loans with no collateral (because the poor didn’t have any), no documentation (since many of the borrowers were illiterate), and relatively low interest rates (compared to money lenders), Grameen helped the absolute poor work for themselves, earn enough to if not prosper then at least survive, and gain a measure of self respect. Just as important, and probably the vital key to its success, Grameen also pushed forward an agenda for social change by concentrating on women borrowers, and encouraging education, family planning and basic personal healthcare. All common sense stuff, but nothing the market economy would attempt on its own left to its own devices.

The book is part autobiography, part microlending manual, and part polemic (with some justice) against multilateral development agencies. If there’s a note of self-congratulation in some of the passages, its well deserved. Probably the best evidence of the effectiveness of Grameen has been the explosion of interest and thousands of copycat organizations across the globe, including in advanced economies. In Malaysia, Amanah Ikhtiar Malaysia conducts microlending operations – I don’t count the micro-finance program run by BNM as equivalent as it doesn’t target the absolute poor.

If there’s a criticism I have, is that microlending is only one aspect of the fight against poverty. I think Grameen’s approach acknowledges this since it explicitly incorporates social reengineering within its operational framework. The problem of course is that all the other methods – education, infrastructure, healthcare, technology transfers – don’t work without access to credit. On that score Prof Yunus has probably stumbled on the one thing that can lift desperately poor places like Sub-Saharan Africa, despite a flood of aid money.

If anyone’s interested in obtaining a copy, the book is available through Amazon.com and locally through MPH.