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Reuters
India Thu
Oct 2, 2008 8:07pm IST
Micro-lending seen expanding despite credit mess
GENEVA,
Oct 2 (Reuters) - The global credit crisis is not making it harder for
poor-country entrepreneurs to access the tiny loans they need to start and grow
businesses, banking executives said on Thursday.
Microfinance -- which became famous when Bangladeshi
economist Muhammad Yunus and his Grameen Bank shared the Nobel Peace Prize in
2006 -- provides small loans to people who lack access to mainstream banking
services.
"We don't see any slowdown in interest in microfinance,
on the contrary," said Ivan Pictet, a senior managing partner at one of Switzerland's
largest private banks, the Geneva-based Pictet & Cie.
Many of the borrowers are women, and the default rates are
only 1 to 2 percent.
"We have a lot of lessons to learn from that,"
Pictet told journalists during a World Microfinance Forum meeting in Geneva.
He said that while pension funds and other big players were
unlikely to pile into microfinance on a large scale, the sector was highly
attractive to individual investors and was likely to keep expanding rapidly in
the years ahead.
Yunus, who also attended the conference, said lenders and
borrowers remained confident in the microfinance business model.
He said investments that help people provide direct services
to poor communities should continue to attract investors in spite of global
credit pressures.
"You are lending money to poor people in a way that can
help them ... You are touching people's lives directly," he said.
(Reporting by Laura MacInnis; editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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