Wednesday, 3 October 2007

Banker to the Poor

Meet Muhammad Yunus. Rock star of the microfinance world. Nobel Peace Prize winner 2006 (shared with the institution he founded). This man started making loans, out of his own pocket, in the mid 70s. He first lent about $27 to a bunch of ladies in a village in Bangladesh, from whence he hails. As of his most recent update Grameen Bank had dished out a cumulative $6.44 billion (that's United States greenbacks) in loans. Rather embarrassingly I would suggest, the Banker to the Poor is starting up an office in Queens, New York City to provide microfinance services there and more widely in the United States. Not sure how it is that the richest country in the world with the most sophisticated financial markets needs to rely on a Bangladeshi to come solve a domestic poverty issue, but there you have it. A shining example of globalisation you might argue.

This is the first of three videos in a series made on Yunus and Grameen Bank. It's an appropriate juncture in my 'basics of microfinance' to include this because Yunus was the original structurer of a microfinance institution as a non-profit venture. These days Grameen Bank is majority owned by its (poor) borrowers. There's a wealth of information out there on Yunus and Grameen. A good place to start, as ever, is with the respective Wikipedia entries (Yunus, Grameen). For information from Yunus himself, see here.

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