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Yunus discusses huge impact of tiny loans
Nobel-winning microlender
tells young entrepreneurs to put business principles to work for good, not
goods
The Denver Post, by Aldo Svaldi
Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus told a Denver
audience Thursday that the idea of making small-business loans to the poor is
so simple, he has struggled his whole life to make people believe it.
Picture: Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus signs a dollar bill signifying the strength of a single dollar for Kara Schlander, 11, Thursday in Denver. (Mark T. Osler, The Denver Post)
"No
collateral, no guarantees, no lawyers," Yunus said of loans extended to
people in desperate poverty.
Despite
their surface risk, the tiny loans, which average only $150 per borrower, have
been repaid at a rate of 98 percent.
Starting
with $27 Yunus lent out to 42 Bangladeshi borrowers in 1976, Grameen Bank has
disbursed $6.7 billion to 7.5 million borrowers, almost all of them female.
The
member-owned bank has moved into more than two dozen other ventures, including
providing cellphones and solar-power systems.
Like
Grameen, the microcredit movement is moving beyond providing capital to the
poor to creating businesses that serve a greater social good.
"Business
is the means. The end is doing good," Yunus told more than 500 people
gathered Thursday for the "Social Business and Microeconomic Opportunities
for Youth" conference at the Four Points Sheraton in Denver.
Sule
Amandu, Michael Calla han, Jacob Castillo and Patrick Flynn from Colorado State
University were among the young entrepreneurs at the conference to present
their business plans.
Their
venture, called PowerMundo, seeks a more efficient method for
John
Hatch, left, was part of discussions Thursday with Muhammad Yunus in his role
as founder of the Foundation for International Community Assistance. (Mark T.
Osler, The Denver Post )
distributing
energy- conserving devices in developing countries. They are testing their
ideas in Peru with cookstoves and solar lights.
"We
want to be the Circuit City for sustainable products," Calla han said.
Besides
young entrepreneurs, the social business movement has also attracted corporate
giants.
French
food manufacturer Danone and Grameen have a joint venture to produce a yogurt
with micronutrients often lacking in the diets of impoverished children.
The
microcredit movement has set a goal of eradicating global poverty by 2025.
Picture: John Hatch, left, was
part of discussions Thursday with Muhammad Yunus in his role as founder of the
Foundation for International Community Assistance. (Mark T. Osler, The Denver
Post )
Aldo
Svaldi: 303-954-1410 or
স্প্যামবটের হাত থেকে এই ই-মেল ঠিকানা সুরক্ষিত আছে। পড়ার জন্যে দয়া করে জাভাস্ক্রিপ্ট সক্রিয় করুন।
Source: http://origin.denverpost.com/business/ci_8565584
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