Fuelled by last year’s Nobel Prize for a man nicknamed ”banker to the poor”, microlending to small businesses in the world’s poorest countries is booming as individuals discover they can be their own mini World Bank.
And you don’t have to be Bill Gates to get in on the act.
A microfinance website that lets people lend as little as $25 to small businesses from Vietnam to Kenya is drawing so much interest from lenders that it’s struggling to keep up.
Kiva.org, described by founder Premal Shah as an ”eBay for microfinance”, has been operating for two years but saw traffic surge after Bangladeshi economist Muhammad Yunus won the Nobel Peace Prize last year as the founder of Grameen Bank.
”Overnight the volume of the traffic to our site pretty much doubled,” Shah said the impact the Nobel Prize had, noting recent publicity and a mention in Bill Clinton’s new book Giving prompted another surge in interest that has left Kiva seeking more borrowers to take all the available money.
Kiva works with dozens of microcredit groups who pick needy businesses — from a Honduran woman selling cosmetics to a Cambodian weaving business or a Ghanaian car-repair shop.
”We’re providing an online platform for connecting the microfinancing people in the field with someone in Des Moines, Iowa, or someone in London,” Shah said.
Shah said the average user funds four businesses on the website, putting $25 into each business, and that about $11-million has been lent so far with no interest charged. He hopes to loan $100-million in the next three years.
The site has photographs and business plans from people seeking amounts that range from $75 to more than $1 000. In a system that mirrors online stores, each microcredit firm is rated according to whether loans have defaulted in the past, how long it has been operating and the total amount of loans.
”If they’re not reliable, they’re not able to raise more money,” Shah said.
Philanthropic boom
Jacqueline Novogratz, an ex-banker who founded the Acumen Fund in 2001 as ”a venture capital fund for the poor”, linked ”new philanthropy” to the tech boom and the changing economy. ”Philanthropy has traditionally mirrored the economy in which it’s functioning, so Rockefeller who created the first foundation mirrored the industrial revolution approach.
”What you saw even before the Nobel Prize was people starting to look at Silicon Valley and seeing whether there could be more innovative ways of using philanthropic resources for change,” she said in an interview.
The Acumen Fund now has $20-million invested in East Africa, Pakistan and India in firms ranging from an ambulance service in Bombay to a mosquito-net factory in Tanzania.
It operates at the other end of the scale from Kiva, investing money from the likes of Bill and Melinda Gates, the Rockefeller Foundation and companies including Nike and Coca-Cola. Its average investment is $600 000 and the fund hopes to invest another $100-million within five years.
Novogratz said Acumen seeks socially responsible businesses with potential to expand rapidly and become self-sustaining, targeting healthcare, housing, water and energy.
Among its projects, entrepreneur Satyan Mishra in Delhi set up Drishtee.com, a franchise of village kiosks selling goods such as eyeglasses, books and agricultural products and services such as computer training and health advice.
”He’s growing at a rate of three new kiosks a day and our goal is to get to 10 000 kiosks in the next couple of years,” Novogratz said.
She said such loans are not intended to supplant traditional aid institutions, especially in post-conflict situations or after disasters.
In another project in India, Novogratz said a company is delivering cheap water to 160 000 people in 61 villages.
”When we first entered that field, the whole conversation in India was, ‘Is water a human right that should be given free to everyone or should you let the market deliver it?’ And the point was 700-million people had no access,” she said.
Research is now under way to see if the business model can be scaled up and made to work for the public sector.
Measurable results are the key for new philanthropists, she said. ”We have over 200 individuals who give to Acumen. No one has ever said, ‘Is my name going on a building?”’
Small lenders are just as concerned with results, Shah said, noting that Kiva posts repayment histories online as well as journals by the business owners on how their loan was used.
”What’s mind blowing for my mom and her friends in Chicago is the fact that you’re getting repaid, because you don’t expect it when you give,” Shah said.
And, he said, while the new philanthropy is closer to banking than charity, ”You still get that warm fuzzy [feeling] of knowing that you’re helping.” — Reuters