A message from Uganda
9 March 2009
Last week I had my first trip to the field. I traveled with Grace, the Kiva Coordinator here at Pearl Microfinance, to two branches in western Uganda, Lugazi and Jinja. Lugazi is about 2 hours away from the office and Jinja is about 40 minutes down the road and across the Nile from Lugazi.
The area between Kampala and these two areas looks shockingly like New England. Having spent many of my summers driving through the wooded areas of New Hampshire and Massachusetts, I found myself drifting back to blueberry pancakes for breakfast as I sat sweating from the heat and close proximity to other passengers on our crowded bus.

All reference to similarities between what I would expect to find at a loan disbursement in New England and a loan disbursement in Uganda are found above.
When I got off the back of the motorcycle that was carrying me to visit one of the borrower groups, I was left on the side of a road with no formal buildings in sight. There were cows grazing across the road, children playing in a field in front of me, a youth group playing soccer in the same field, and under a mango tree all the way across the field sat Omunamku Khama Group. The group had come together to sign their names (stamp their thumbprints), exchange pleasantries, receive their cash loans, and then head back to work to grow their businesses.

The credit officer in this area, Carol, told me that two of members, who came to the meeting laughing and clearly full of jokes, always “abuse her.” (This is a way of saying that they tease her.) They tell her “you may have gone to school, but we have more businesses than you.” Carol, who has worked with Pearl for over 10 years, seemed delighted that these women took such pride in their accomplishments.
Just a Note:
Something I had not fully realized about group loans, at least at Pearl Microfinance, is that the members do put down security that guarantees their repayment. Members pledge things like their radios, furniture, goats, bicycles, and cows. For some reason the way that microfinance group loans had been explained to me, I assumed that borrowers pledged their reputation rather than their material possessions.
Help fund loans for hardworking borrowers like these ones on the kiva website!
Entry Filed under: KF7 (Kiva Fellows 7th Class), PEARL Microfinance, Uganda. Tags: kf7, Kiva Fellows, Microfinance in Uganda, security on loans in Uganda, Stephane Koczela, Uganda.
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1. Michelle Frehner | 10 March 2009 at 04:39
Hello Stephanie! I love reading about your adventures. You sure seem to appreciate every little nuance and moment along the way. Keep posting! michelle
2. Bill Brick, KF6 | 10 March 2009 at 07:20
Stephanie – love the vid! Gosh, does that take me back…thanks!
3. milena08 | 11 March 2009 at 01:08
Stephanie,
I love that they use goats as loan collateral! Great post. Have you been white water rafting in Jinja yet?
~Milena (KF6, Kenya)
4. Zack | 11 March 2009 at 08:42
Hi Steph,
Cool video. I’m impressed that you were able to get it uploaded from Uganda! Thanks for your patience in making this video available to us. I bet it took some time.
5. Ibrahim | 12 March 2009 at 06:07
Staphanie,
Micro finance institutions do rely on Borrowers reputations as collateral but I think this is not a hard and fast rule. You apply what best suits the environment you are operating on. If Pearl Micro Finance have discovered that little collateral like radios, cows etc. can discourage borrowers from defaulting, then that is fine.
But there are things I do not understand. Things like radios and bicycles a too cheap. For what loan size will such things serve as collateral? Where do Pearl Micro Finance keeps all of these items? And the cows, where do they keep them? And when they give birth, does the Borrower get the mother cow and the young one? And in case it dies, who bears the lose?
Thanks for your work.
6. Questions on Collateral at Pearl Microfinance « Kiva Stories from the Field | 15 March 2009 at 21:56
[...] March 2009 In a previous post, I mentioned that many clients of microfinance pledge real items not just their reputations as [...]
7. Blub | 16 March 2009 at 06:19
were is uganda and how do i find a pet monkey
8. Blub | 16 March 2009 at 06:20
pleez tell me i wish to raise a farm of monkeys