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| BANKING ON PEOPLE | |
April 24, 2001 |
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Fred de Sam Lazaro reports
on the Grameen Bank, a Bangladeshi microfinance institution providing
loans to low-income borrowers. |
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FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Nurul Islam has an unusual routine for a bank loan officer. Once a week, he comes to this shack to meet with his small business clients and to collect their loan installments. Unusual doesn't start to describe the borrowers.
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| Elegant theory versus harsh reality | ||||||||||||||||||||
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MUHAMMED YUNUS, Grameen Bank: I didn't have a blueprint of any kind. I was not looking for a destination. All I was trying to do was to be helpful for today. FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Muhammad Yunus was a young economics professor in 1974, when the idea of offering banking services to poor people-- an idea that came to be called micro-lending-- occurred to him. It was in the midst of one of this country's legendary natural disasters.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Yunus wanted to apply some of his economic theories to the real world he saw. So he surveyed 42 small business owners-- fruit vendors, artisans, rickshaw pullers-- and found that just $27 would free the whole group from debts to local money lenders, debt that kept them in almost lifelong bonded labor. Yunus decided to bankroll the group himself, after failing to sell local bankers on the idea. MUHAMMED YUNUS: I soon found out that people are paying back, and they paid back every penny without any hitch. So I got very excited. So I thought I should have my own bank. So I went to the government with a proposal that I should be allowed to set up a bank.
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| Empowering women | ||||||||||||||||||||
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MUHAMMED YUNUS: Women are very cautious with the use of the money, but the men were impatient; they wanted to enjoy right away. They will entertain friends, they will go to the movies, they will do whatever they could to enjoy for themselves personally. But women didn't look at it personally. Women looked at it for the children, for the family and the so on, and for future.
DILWARA BEGUM (translated): In the past, we used to eat nothing more than rice and some vegetables. Today in each meal there is egg, meat, or fish-- at least one of them. Also, in the past we used to grow enough rice for about six months of the year; the rest we had to buy. Sometimes we had to borrow money to buy the rice. Today we grow enough rice for the whole year.
HUSSAIN ZILLUR RAHMAN: I can bet my little savings that a famine in Bangladesh is not likely to occur, will not occur, actually. The threat of famine has been defeated. That's a fantastic achievement actually.
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| Education a top priority | ||||||||||||||||||||
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MAN: hello? FRED DE SAM LAZARO: The phone rings often at the home of Dharani and Shamoli Sarkar. Theirs is the only phone in their village, financed by Grameen and rented out as a pay phone to a poultry farmer trying to reach a veterinarian in the city, for example, or expatriates, like this one, calling from the Persian Gulf oil fields to relatives back home. "Call back in ten minutes," Sarkar instructed the caller as he set off to alert the family. He said the job of walking phone booth is mostly his, even though his wife, Shamoli, actually holds title to the Grameen loan and to the phone. Indeed, the traditional domestic routine for most Grameen borrowers hasn't changed much. Still, Grameen officials say, as the family's meal ticket, the women increase their leverage in family decisionmaking, and this improves their sense of confidence.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: The bank also wants to change the future face of Bangladesh. It asks borrowers to have fewer children and to educate them. Poultry entrepreneurs Dilwara Begum and Nazim Uddin between them had just four years of formal education. But their son, Nasir, who is 20, will finish college in two years and plans to start his own poultry business. At 16, his sister, Nasrin, would traditionally be married. Instead she will go to college and hopes to become a journalist. Education has become a top priority in the Grameen group.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Impressive as these successes are, illiteracy and poverty remain in daunting proportion in this nation, where per capita income is about $300 a year. Yunus blames the slow progress on the sluggish Bangladesh economy, whose major financial institutions, ironically, hold billions of dollars in bad debts to large businesses. |
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