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Yunus spells out lessons for bankers |
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Star Business Desk (The Daily Star)
Nobel
laureate Muhammad Yunus (C) speaks as Steve Gunderson (L), president and
CEO, Council on Foundations and Rick Warren (R), Pastor, Saddleback
Church listen, at the Clinton Global
Initiative (CGI) in New York
on Friday. Photo: AFP
Yunus put forward the lesson to world leaders as he spoke at former US President Bill Clinton's global summit
in New York
on Friday amid unfolding woes of Wall Street giants collapsing one after
another.
The three-day summit came to a close on Friday with Clinton's appreciation of microfinance
investors who helped ``real people'' make a ``real rate of return'' in
poor nations.
It was suggested that the financial giants look to the world's humblest
lenders.
"We have to get out of this mindset that the rich will do the
business and the poor will have the charity," said Yunus, founder of
Grameen Bank, which provides small business loans to people who cannot
get traditional loans.
The Clinton Global Initiative brought together global leaders to develop
and then implement workable solutions to some of the world's most
pressing challenges.
Yunus, the "banker to the poor," won the Nobel in 2006 for
inspiring a global microfinance movement that has lifted millions out of
poverty by granting tiny loans.
Unlike Wall Street, which is reeling from a flood of loans that may never
be paid back, Grameen Bank has a recovery rate of more than 98 percent,
according to media reports.
In his speech, Clinton cautioned against
allowing the US
financial crisis to undercut anti-poverty aid.
As congressional leaders try to hammer out a $700 billion bailout plan to
buoy US financial markets, Clinton said lenders for small-scale
businesses in impoverished nations were ``smart people'' making money
with a ``real economy based on real people doing real things for a real
rate of return".
Clinton unveiled 250 new commitments worth $8
billion and aimed at improving living conditions for about 158 million
people as his annual conference ended in New York.
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