How Kiva helps the poor deal with life’s uncertainties
29 November 2009 at 09:00 adamkb 7 comments
By Adam Kemmis Betty, KF9 Bolivia
Those frustrated with the health-and-safety of Europe and North America often celebrate the apparent appetite for risk in countries such as Bolivia, where you carry your machete into the local bar or cram a dozen people into the back of your car without fear of reprimand.
In fact, this tolerance for risk is largely borne out necessity rather than any deep-seated cultural predilection. The Bolivian poor spend a great deal of energy trying to minimise the risks and uncertainties in the lives. The trouble is, it’s hard to do. To start with, life is simply riskier in a country with numerous tropical diseases, an underdeveloped transport network and extreme weather conditions (exacerbated in recent years by climate change). The majority do not have access to insurance, which would the first backstop in times of crisis for most in Europe or North America. And finally, most do not have sufficient savings to draw on in the event of an expected shock: be it a bad harvest, sickness of a family member or a house fire. Such an event will typically result in increased poverty for the family, perhaps undoing the hard-fought gains of generations.
There isn’t much that microfinance institutions (MFIs) can do – directly at least – do reduce the riskiness of their clients’ environment. However, they can provide financial services to help the poor cope better with life’s uncertainties, and these are often bundled together with the loans made through Kiva.
Basic credit life insurance is compulsory for all borrowers in Bolivia who take out an individual loan, and most MFIs also insure group borrowers against the death of one of their members. This coverage means that if the borrower dies, the debt is forgiven and the family (or group) is not burdened with repayments. Many policies also include a benefit for the deceased’s family to cover funeral costs. In some cases these products have been developed by the MFIs themselves (Agrocapital, for example, is currently designing its own life insurance product for group loans), while in others the MFI works a commercial insurer to cover its clients.
Of course this type of insurance has its limitations: one Kiva borrower, who lived on one of the particularly steep mountainside slopes of La Paz, lost her house to a landslip. This was not covered by her insurance policy, although in this case the MFI, Emprender, decided to make an exception as she was a long-term reliable client in dire need. As the microinsurance sector develops, insurance companies are increasingly providing other types of policy in partnership with MFIs, such as home or health insurance.
Saving is another way to manage risk, building up a reserve to draw on in case of emergency. Most of Kiva’s MFI partners are not regulated banks, and therefore can’t take deposits from customers, but many still do offer savings products via agreements with other institutions. Pro Mujer Bolivia, for example, provides all its clients with an account at a regulated financial institutional called Fie, and obliges all borrowers to make a deposit with each loan repayment. At the end of the loan term the borrowers are able to draw on the savings they’ve accumulated. Currently, all MFIs in Bolivia are in the process of becoming regulated, meaning that the availability of savings products is likely to increase in the near future.
As such products become increasingly important adjuncts to microloans, Kiva could consider including more product details in its loan descriptions, for example indicating whether the borrower is insured or required to save. In the meantime, to lend to a Kiva borrower from Bolivia, click here.
Entry filed under: AgroCapital, Bolivia, Emprender, KF9 (Kiva Fellows 9th Class), Pro Mujer Bolivia. Tags: Bolivia, insurance, Kiva Fellows, kiva microloans, microcredit, microfinance, microinsurance, savings.




1. kibwana matanda idesbald(blackstone) | 20 January 2010 at 06:23
I’ve come accross exactly people trying to alleviate unnecessariy poverty.I’m getting to know them….I do assume you are the people to resort to with the most honesty and seriousness…see you next time.I’m conolese in DRC-KATANGA.
K.M.I. Blackstone
2. lethalsheethal | 1 December 2009 at 12:43
Nice post Adam!
I feel the same way every time I get in to the back of a taxi or a bus to visit entrepreneurs here in Cusco. The roads are windy and the taxistas drive incredibly fast.
3. Suzy Marinkovich | 30 November 2009 at 18:28
Awesome post…I miss Bolivia already. There are no cholitas in Argentina. I know, it’s a horrible thing to imagine! Microinsurance is so important, I am excited to see that sector develop within microfinance.
4. patrick sanya | 30 November 2009 at 05:17
IM PASTOR IN KENYA,I WOULD LIKE YOU TO LEND ME FEW MONEY TO START BUSINESS ,LIKE $1500.I SELL CEREALS IN MY TOWN BUSIA KENYA..
5. Adam Preston | 29 November 2009 at 16:46
Nice overview of the role of your MFI and the environment in which it operates. Here in the Philippines, ASKI provides many of the same services including insurance and savings programs. To me this is the real value of the MFI, the additional services provided beyond just the lending.
6. BISAN KEZIAH BARIAT | 30 November 2009 at 10:26
am a part time student in one of the polythecnics here in Nigeria, i need a loan of $1000 to enable me to start up a business centre because right nown am working in a cafe here in Nigeria but starting my own business will enable me be able to earn more. Kiva came for a seminar in my church her in Nigeria i.e Family Worship Centre and that was how i got to know about Kiva empowerment. Therefore i solicit for assistance and promise to be productive.I need my own business so that i can be able to sustain my self in School and to also help my poor mother.
7. Jan & John, KivaFriends | 29 November 2009 at 11:42
I am always pleased to hear of MFI encouragement of savings and the good news that further involvement is planned. One of my biggest fears is with people becoming overburdened with debt because we can see what is happening in our own economy. I am pleased when the MFI offers, at the very least, education and/or help with ways to save for the future and yes, Kiva could certainly get that message across and allow lenders to choose the MFI that meets those goals. jan