Archive for November 10th, 2009

Why Me?: A Post about Bolivian Women

By Suzy Marinkovich, KF8 Peru & KF9 Bolivia

Twisted twining vining metal unrhythmic untamed unkempt and in comes the dust sweat and sticking to me tires thumping each rock unsettled plastic bag squeezed empty tossed out the window just a drop of papaya juice leaps back clings to the dirty car door parting from the white stretch of plastic mangling on wire scraps whose posture, never organized (more…)

17 comments 10 November 2009

So, what is a “community bank”?

By Julia Kastner, KF9 Mexico

When Kiva first started, all of its loans were to individuals.  Borrower A asked for X dollars and voila!  Person A got a Kiva loan.   Over time, however, Kiva’s been working with more and more MFIs, and the number of different types of loans and lending models has been increasing.

Watch a meeting of a community bank (a.k.a. UDE):

As Kiva explains:

“In a group loan, each member of the group receives an individual loan but is part of a group of individuals bound by a group guarantee. Under this arrangement, each member of the group supports one another and is responsible for paying back the loans of their fellow group members if someone is delinquent or defaults.”

So,  how is an UDE different from other group loans?  Why is an UDE helpful? And how does it work?

These are the questions I’ve been asking folks here at FRAC for the last two months, and this is what I’ve learned…

(more…)

4 comments 10 November 2009

Big is beautiful in Kenya

by Rachel Brooks, KF9, Kenya

My favorite Kiva field partner before I started my fellowship was Kisimu Medical & Education Trust, here in Kenya. At K-MET, microfinance is a smaller part of a community-based health organization. They offer loans to providers (many of them volunteers) so that they can maintain or improve their clinics and services. And they have these wonderfully innovative programs to help women and improve reproductive health.

But as much as programs like these make me go weak at the knees, I’ve also really come around to loving what the scope and focus of a big MFI can offer. Big is beautiful.

Lydia Koros

Faulu's Director holds the BIG certificate

Faulu Kenya has more than 90 outlets across the country, over 1000 staff members, and a fairly large headquarters. They are laser-focussed on providing financial services to low-income people, with over 250,000 clients. They want to reach a million clients by 2011. (more…)

4 comments 10 November 2009


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