Posts Tagged ‘Banker to the Poor’

Micro-level Stories and the Big Picture

posted: 2010-05-14 @ 12:30 pm EDT

By Patricia Wada

This probably marks me as a newbie, but my interest in microfinance began when I read Banker to the Poor by Muhammad Yunus. I was working at the Asian Development Bank Institute in Tokyo, Japan, and was interested in how microfinance could be a piece of the international development puzzle. Fast forward a few years and you find me now, a microfinance enthusiast at the tail end of an eight-month internship at Kiva.

Kiva is a website that lets you make micro-loans of as little as $25 to low-income borrowers around the world. A quick browse through the Kiva lending page offers a glimpse into the lives of these borrowers.

In Peru, Edgar is borrowing to buy seeds for his agriculture business. In Senegal, Tacko is borrowing for her mobile phone business. And right here in the United States, Ana is borrowing to improve her childcare business. It is these individual stories that originally attracted me to Kiva, and they continue to fuel my enthusiasm for microfinance.

One of the sessions I’m most looking forward to is “The Rise of P2P Lending.” Peer-to-peer lending sites like Kiva have opened up a new funding channel for microfinance. At the same time, they provide something traditional funding sources don’t: an educational opportunity for individuals who lend on the site.

I’m also excited to hear from individual micro-loan borrowers. I’ve spent a lot of time working with over 400 volunteers who edit and translate their profiles for Kiva, so I can’t wait to meet some Kiva borrowers at the “Kiva Lender-Borrower Meet-Up.”

The “Opening Session: Conversation with Maria Shriver” is likely to be a highlight for me because of the chance to hear Maria Shriver speak, along with Kiva President Premal Shah. Thursday night’s “Taste of Microentrepreneurship” event will combine two things I’m passionate about microfinance and food, as microentrepreneurs will be representing Bay Area kitchens in a “food festival”!

On the other end of the spectrum, the conference offers sessions on important big-picture questions. I’m particularly interested in “What is a Fair Price to Pay for Good Credit?” and “Is Savings Even More Important than Credit?” These have been hot topics in the Kiva office and in the microfinance world, and I’m looking forward to hearing the experts weigh in.

The conference promises a great mix of sessions for seasoned microfinance professionals and relative newbies alike. It’s not too late to register for individual sessions or for the whole conference. I hope to see you there!

Patricia Wada has just completed an eight-month internship in Kiva’s Review and Translation Team. She previously worked in the publications department of the Asian Development Bank Institute in Tokyo, Japan. A believer in the importance of microfinance for poverty alleviation, Patricia is continually inspired by the stories of microfinance clients all over the world.

Continuing My Microfinance Education

posted: 2010-05-13 @ 11:06 am EDT

By Delaine Zody

For 21 years I have worked in an inner city school in the middle of California’s Central Valley. My students come from very poor neighborhoods with little chance to see what is beyond their six blocks. 

Seeing a need I helped build a program at my school, called the Marketing Academy. Through the program we showed students how to start their own business, and through guest speakers and field trips, opened them up to a world of possibilities.  Many of these students have gone on to have successful careers and started their own businesses. 

Seeing this success made me want to continue to work with organizations that can help others be successful. So as I planned my third career, I took into account how microfinance was doing just that and where I might fit.  My research started with reading Muhammad Yunus’s book, “Banker to the Poor” and then lead to an interest in Microfinance USA conferences

This year, when I received the notice for Microfinance USA 2010 and learned that it would be in San Francisco, I was doubly excited.  Not only would I get to learn more about this method of helping people get out of poverty through entrepreneurship, but I could do it in my favorite city, and new hometown, San Francisco. 

I signed up immediately and was even able to get registered for the Micro-entrepreneur Tour. This session is all about visiting microfinance borrowers at their places of business throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. I am really excited to learn about what real entrepreneurs are doing and how microfinance has helped them.

Another session that I am excited to attend is Student-Led Microfinance Clubs.  With my background in teaching and the examples I have read of two schools where teachers have had students invest in microfinance organizations such as Kiva. I am looking forward to hearing what other students are doing to start microfinance clubs on campus. 

The Opening Session: Conversation with Maria Shriver will be a great way to start the conference and hear the First Lady of California’s take on the growth of microfinance and how it will help California. Just having Maria Shriver attend lends an air of excitement to the two-day event. Looking forward to seeing you all there!

 

Delaine Zody is currently a teacher in an inner city school where she has collaborated on two smaller learning communities within the business department.  She teaches entrepreneurship and is a microfinance enthusiast. Blogging athttp://dkzody.wordpress.com/