
www.lendwithcare.org entrepreneur Batchassi Lores who used a loan to buy a grinding mill and set up his own business.
It is important to increase the provision of microfinance, but given the potential vulnerability of many of the poor people we work with, it is also important that this is done in a responsible and transparent manner while adhering to the highest ethical standards.
Blog by by Dr Ajaz Ahmed Khan, Microfinance Advisor for www.lendwithcare.org
Comment by Spanda Foundation on July 5, 2011 at 7:23 Still a long way to go...
Dear Ajaz,
Thank you for your post.
I also blogged about the Radio 4 programme and the earlier BBC Newsnight report here:
http://fivetalents.org.uk/blog/
I think commercial investors have really helped to upscale microfinance and reach millions of clients over recent years. This is generally good news for the poor, bringing greater financial access and choice. But with such fast growth comes growing pains and these have become evident in some particular cases. Commercial pressures in some cases have led to mission drift and cost cutting. Hopefully the "crisis" will help to improve practices. At Five Talents we are firmly committed to serving the poor and our partner programmes have strong emphases on savings and training, which together with our Church-links, maintains and prioritises our social focus. That fits with our charitable (NGO) status, enabling us to reach places where commercial providers may fear to tread (or where it's simply too expensive for them) - e.g. our programme in Sudan. We need both, but with good practice and transparency for all concerned.
Many thanks and best wishes,
Tom Sanderson
Five Talents UK
tom.sanderson@fivetalents.org.uk
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