Professor Muhammad Yunus is the father of microfinance. He founded Grameen Bank in Bangaldesh which has provided microloans to the poorest people without collateral and has garnered a 98%+ loan payback rate. That's pretty good!
Grameen America: Video 1 | Video 2 | Video 3 | Video 4
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Muhammand Yunus highlights/principles:
* However you live, your habits and behavior cannot take away enjoyment from another person (in reference to climate change).
* Who's creditworthy? Almost everybody!
* The new normalcy cannot be the old normalcy else the economic collapse will happen again. We need a redesign.
* Financial apartheid has been practiced on poor people by the banks by not lending to them.
* You can clearly see that in the currently financial crises that banks are not giving loans to businesses forcing them to close. The same thing has been happening to the poor in perpetuity.
* Let's fully develop a person's gift and/or talent. The poor people are poor because they do not get the opportunity to full develop themselves.
* Selfless Business is Social Business. In social business an investment is made and gotten back with no profit. Th goal of th business is to improve people's lives. Some people have a desire to make money while others have the desire to be selfless, hence the need for social business.
* All inputs and outputs must be considered in a social business
* Let's put poverty in the museum
Grameen Bank vs Goldman Sachs:
Grameen has no contracts or lawyers. Grameen takes no collateral. Grameen has a face to face relationship with the borrower. Grameen bank comes to the person to make the loan. Grameen's balance sheet is easy to understand while Goldman Sach's is complicated. (My opinion)Anything that cannot be understood by a high school graduate is bull.
[Video] Professor Muhammad Yunus on Social Business
After Mohammed Yunus was awarded the Noble Prize, micro-finance has become a buzz word. But I think, there is so much poverty around that despite exponential growth in this sector, there are still needy people around who need to be given a chance to get out of the poverty.
ReplyDeleteMicrofinance is only the beginning and only 1 prong in a multiprong approach.
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