International Monetary Fund.
The bottom line never changes: Individuals, firms,
and governments need capital to do things today that they could not otherwise
afford; the financial markets provide it to them—at a price.
Modern economies cannot survive without credit. Indeed,
the international
development community has begun to realize that making credit available to
entrepreneurs in the developing world, even loans as small as $50 or $100, can
be a powerful tool for fighting poverty. Opportunity
International is one such
“microcredit” lender. In 2000, the organization made nearly 325,000 low-
collateral or non-collateral loans in twenty-four developing countries. The
average loan size was a seemingly paltry $195. Esther Gelabuzi, a widow in
Uganda
with six children, represents a typical story. She is a professional
midwife, and she used a tiny loan by Western standards to set up a clinic (still
without electricity). She has since delivered some fourteen hundred babies,
charging patients from $6 to $14 each. Opportunity
International claims to have
created some 430,000 jobs. As impressive, the repayment rate on the micro-
loans is 96 percent.
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