Thursday, July 08, 2010

Grameen Bank expands into rich nations

The financial world may be crashing down around him, but Muhammad Yunus' Grameen Bank continues to expand. The bank that began giving small loans to people in Bangladesh is expanding into rich nations. Three years after the Grameen Bank started in the US, they will open a new office in San Francisco, as well as a new office in Glasgow, Scotland.

From Newsweek Magazine, writer Rana Foroohar talks about giving tiny loans in the rich world.

It’s pretty safe to say that three years ago no one could have predicted that one of the few financial institutions to be opening new branches and expanding lending in America would be a Bangladeshi bank that specialized in loans to people below the poverty line (the vast majority of them women). But that’s just what has happened. Grameen America, the U.S. offshoot of the famous Asian microlending institution founded by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, is now in its third year of operation in America, and even as the major banks, still battered from the financial crisis, are keeping credit tighter than ever, particularly to the small and midsize businesses that need it so desperately, Grameen is expanding. This summer, the little Bangladeshi bank—already operating in New York; Omaha; and Washington, D.C.—will move into its fourth U.S. city, San Francisco, fueled by a series of loans from institutions like Wells Fargo and Capital One that, aside from basking in the glow of good PR, have realized that they are more likely to get their money back by lending to African-American hairdressers in Queens or Latina food-cart operators in D.C. than by chucking money at middle-class whites who have bought more McMansion than they can afford.

Ironically, Yunus himself has characterized Grameen as “sub-sub-subprime.” In this case, it’s not a bad thing. Since its establishment in 1983, Grameen has given out billions to borrowers around the world, mainly women below the poverty line, and has recouped 98 percent of its loans. Admittedly, those loans are tiny—$1,500 on average in the U.S., but much less elsewhere. Interest rates are high (15 percent in the American operation), but they are much less than the poor would pay a black-market lender. According to its proponents, the Grameen model works because of peer pressure. Each borrower is required to attend a weekly meeting with other borrowers, all of whom are responsible for communal payback rates (the group can’t borrow more if individuals don’t pay back). Each borrower must also contribute to a personal savings account to help create a financial cushion while building a business.

It’s a model that is the antithesis of the big-bank system of recent years, in which the “know your customer” approach of the local savings and loans went out of fashion and the complex bundling of thousands of mortgages came in. The Grameen way recalls the Latin meaning of the word credit, which is “to believe in.” Grameen builds community at the same time it builds financial security among its members. “I think the financial crisis will be an opportunity,” said Yunus in a speech to borrowers last year, “to create an entirely new type of financial system.” At the opening of a branch in lower Manhattan this past May, Yunus pointed out that “Wall Street does banking to the world, but it doesn’t do banking for its neighbors. We are here to show there’s nothing wrong with banking with neighbors.” Indeed, they may be among the most creditworthy.

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