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Tuesday, November 6, 2007

NEWS WIRE: Bangladesh: Yunus Says World Bank Has Failed to Fight Poverty

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Tuesday, September 4, 2007

MICROCAPITAL STORY: Bangladesh Commemorates Nobel Prize Winner and Microfinance Pioneer Mohammad Yunus on Postage Stamp

Bangladesh Chief Adviser Dr. Fakhruddin Ahmed Wednesday formally released a commemorative postage stamp along with a first day cover (An envelope with a stamp canceled on its first day of sale) on Professor Muhammad Yunus and Grameen Bank for winning the Nobel Prize October of last year. Continue Reading »

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Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Mohammed Yunus of Grameen Bank Expresses Interest in Translating his Success in Microfinance to Bangladeshi Politics

According to the Indo Asian New Service and the India Daily, Bangladeshi Nobel Laureate Mohammed Yunus of the Grameen Foundation announced that he would join the political process in Bangladesh. Quoting from the article in the Daily India, Mohammed Yunus said, “If people of Bangladesh think that my entry in politics will improve things I am ready to risk a chance.” Mr. Yunus also indicated that his official entrance will not be an easy decision because his family and close friends do not want to see his name tarnished as is sometimes the case in the democratic process. He does, however, wish to use the opportunities provided to him through his reception of the Nobel Peace Prize last year to continue making positive changes in the region. Mr. Yunus mentioned an election in the near future, suggesting entrance into the Parliamentary elections that have been postponed indefinitely since their scheduled date of 21 January 2007 and their rescheduled date of 22 January 2007.

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Tuesday, February 6, 2007

Mohammed Yunus of Grameen Bank Uses Influence to Encourage the Indian Congress to Open a Nonprofit Microcredit Institution

Mohammed Yunus, head of Grameen Bank and 2006 Nobel Peace Prize recipient, attended a two-day international conference in New Delhi, India on Mahatma Gandhi’s Satyagraha (nonviolence movement) centenary with Sonia Gandhi, India’s chief of Congress. In a conversation between the two, Mr. Yunus expressed his desire to promote microfinance institutions for women in India and for the Indian Congress to head it. Ms. Gandhi has not officially agreed, but party insiders report a positive reaction.


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Friday, October 13, 2006

Open the Capital Flood Gates: Mohammed Yunus of the Grameen Bank Wins Nobel Peace Prize

In the October issue of the MicroCapital Monitor, we reported that “we may look back on September 2006 as the catalyst month for microfinance.” From the microcapital perspective, the Peace Prize awarded to Mr. Yunus will take us from catalytic moment to a flood of capital more quickly than most anticipated.

Are we ready? On this day of great celebration, we urge caution.

Mr. Yunus has traveled the world tirelessly to promote “credit as a human right”, inspiring audiences and global leaders alike with his unflappable charisma and compelling message. To see him is to believe him; to understand his message is to be called to action. The Nobel committee aptly states that he “has shown himself to be a leader who has managed to translate visions into practical action for the benefit of millions of people  [because]   lasting peace can not be achieved unless large population groups find ways in which to break out of poverty.” For over 30 years, microfinance entrepreneurs like Mr. Yunus have overcome all naysayers to prove the practice: Micro-credit works.

However, for years now, business-minded microfinance luminaries committed to eradicating global poverty in our lifetimes have cautioned us that “microfinance lacks capacity”. This is to say that micro-banks currently lack the institutional strength to become large (“scaled”) organizations due to unprofessional management, opaque governance, and meager balance sheets. Poverty continues to dwarf micro-banks. In short, micro-banks as a class are still immature.

Mr. Yunus’ micro-bank, of course, does not lack capacity. Since 1983, when the Grameen bank was founded, it has lent the equivalent of USD 5.72 billion to some 6 billion Bangladeshis in 70,000 villages. It has a gross loan portfolio (as of December 2005) of USD 424 million on a total asset base of USD 646.5 million, upon which it returned 0.32%.

Such powerful micro-banks are the exception to the rule. Of the estimated 10,000 micro-banks operating around the world (no one knows the actual number), almost all are small “mom and pop” outfits unprepared to handle the coming flood of capital. Around 100 have the capacity of the Grameen Bank. However, this cautionary reality will be lost, lost when millions of people today flock to the wires to learn about microfinance after Mr. Yunus’ long-overdue recognition.

Broad and deep institutional capacity is required to deliver credit as a human right. Until recently, donors have bank-rolled this development. Indeed, Grameen is a success story propelled by millions of dollars in donations and subsidies. However, those days are over. Now that microfinance has turned the corner, such donations and subsidies wreck progress by distorting competition and retarding the institutional capacity of emerging micro-banks. The job of being a responsible donor in microfinance has become very complicated.

Accordingly, microfinance investors also face huge challenges to success. Now that the flood gates have opened, we will soon start to see melt-downs of microfinance sectors in specific countries due to over-investment, be it investments for a return on capital, or subsidies, or donations which continue to flow contrary to established best-practices.

The flood of interest by the Peace Prize will require investors to seek innovation like never before. Examples of buy-side products to watch include: TIAA-CREF’s equity investment, Citigroup’s fund committed to “second-tier” or emerging micro-banks, or Gray Ghosts’ secondary market activity. Donors too are innovating (often led by CGAP); examples of donor innovation include Kiva’s peer to peer lending or the Grameen Foundation’s guarantee fund.

In conclusion, Mr. Yunus, thank you so very much for your leadership. The microfinance watershed is upon us thanks to great leaders like you and everyone who has labored for so long to prove that micro-credit works. The next stage, the stage when we provide responsible financial services to the global majority at a good price, will depend on world-class risk management.

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