The title refers to the practise of angel investing by those wealthy enough to provide seed capital to start-ups too small to obtain same from venture-capital firms. The small investments made by the aforementioned angels are referred to as a "spray and pray" strategy that more than makes up for any risk taken should the start-up meet with success and allow them to realize a fortune before shares go public. Of course, if this happens, it seems to me that the angel's halo might be said to slip just a little off centre. After all, if you look to profit by your good-doing, aren't you really nothing more than a risk-taking, mere mortal businessperson?
Semantics aside, I was glad to read, in December 2010, that Grameen Bank founder, Nobel Peace laureate Muhammad Yunus, has been cleared by the Norwegian government on charges that the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh had wrongly diverted aid cash. A documentary recently made by Danish filmmaker Tom Heinemann had alleged that Yunus had siphoned nearly $100m of Norwegian aid off from Grameen Bank to Grameen Kalyan, a branch not involved in micro-credit.
A spokesman for the foreign ministry in Oslo said that the matter had been thoroughly investigated and that "We are fully satisfied that no Norwegian money is missing or unaccounted for ... Again we wish to stress that there is no indication that Norwegian funds have been used for unintended purposes, or that Grameen Bank has engaged in corrupt practices or embezzled funds."
The Prime Minister of Bangladesh, Sheikh Hasina, says that microfinance has failed to lift people out of poverty and that credit on loans is charged at an usurious rate. While this may be true in some instances, it is not universally the case. Yunus and his Grameem Bank were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 for a reason and I doubt that it would have been for charging exorbitant interest rates. The problem is that so many who have jumped on the microfinance band wagon have done so with the sole intent of lining their own nests and some even send out thugs to use violent means to collect payment. Unfortunately, Yunus and his ilk have no control over such reprobates who sully the image of microfinance, but even as some take immoral advantage of the loan-seeking poor, Yunus maintains his original intent of acting as a banker to the underprivileged. He continues, for instance, with his bank's policy of rescheduling loan repayment in times of natural disaster. That, to me, seems to bespeak a halo that is still firmly in place, front and centre. Learning about Yunus and his Grameen Bank first inspired me in 2005, and continues to do so to this day. It is because I live in the privileged conditions granted to so many of us who dwell in the western world that the idea of taking part in microfinance appeals to my sense of what is the right thing to do.
A while ago, upon seeing my efforts to spread the word about the idea through my posts, a friend gave me the gift of money to loan through Kiva, an organization akin to the Grameen Foundation. Immediately, I made that first loan, and I was hooked. I have to date made twelve loans through Kiva to third world entrepreneurs, in my own little spray and pray strategy. In spite of what Sheikh Hasina and other naysayers may claim about its supposed failure, I believe in microfinance.
Showing posts with label Kiva. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kiva. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
To Spread Peace
Plans to build a mosque at Ground Zero set my teeth on edge, as I have detailed before, but I have no control over that. I can not stop the plans for such an insult to the memory of those who died on 9/11. I can not single-handedly stop the hate that swirls so violently through the supposed religion of peace, but I can still light my little candle against the dark. I can do what I can to make the world a better place for me and mine, you and yours. To that end, I will be returning yet again to Kiva, a place I already frequent. Once there, I will be delighting in the loaning of another $50. I have already made enough loans that I've lost track of just how many. The two new loans I will be making will be part of my effort to spread peace; to let others know that there is goodness and caring in the world. I want others to know that there are those who stand ready to help, simply because it is the right thing to do; not because the person to whom I will make this loan has been first coerced into behaving in some way I decree they should or believing some dogma that I demand they accept. I want them to know that they are important, even to people whom they will never meet. They are valued, simply because they are alive and part of my global family.
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