| At
an international gathering of micrcredit experts
in the nearby city of Puebla, President Vicente
Fox pushed his plan for an ambitious loan program
that he hopes will produce a multitude of Arguellos,
by offering credit where none is available. The
program aims to double, to 600,000, the number of
microloans in Mexico over the next few years. Fox's
plan is an aggressive--some say too aggressive--attempt
to make up for Mexico's relatively late start in
microcredit which involves making small loans that
allow people with little or no collateral to start
their own businesses. Other countries in Latin America
and Asia are much further along in channeling government
and donor funds into small loans for the poorest
of the poor. With one-twelfth of Mexico's population,
Bolivia already has twice as many microcredit borrowers.
According to microcredit experts, an estimated 30
million impoverished borrowers, mainly in Asia and
Latin America, are receiving small loans designed
to make them self sustaining by government or donor
capital, and often include health and vocational
training. The penetration of microcredit programs
among Mexico's poor has been stymied by several
factors. |
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There is an innate distrust of any lender among
poor Mexicans, especially those who have lived through
failures of the country's banking system. In addition,
past rural loan programs under the long-ruling Institutional
Revolutionary Party, or PRI, often gave money away
in exchange for political support, feeding a culture
of loan defaults. But since Fox took office in December,
ending seven decades of PRI rule, he has promised
to replace patronage with sustainable microcredit
programs to stimulate private initiative among the
poor and reduce poverty. |
The
first major step came in April, when the Mexican Congress
passed a law setting up the legal framework for a new
class of microfinance companies that can give loans
of as little as $50 and also take saving deposits. Regulations
for the industry, which will be largely self-governed
and self-insured, are still being drawn up, but loans
should start flowing in the next several weeks.
Some
observers at the meeting, which was co-sponsored by
the Mexican government and the private Washington-based
Microcredit Summit Campaign, thought the Fox
plan might be pushing too hard, saying successful programs
have evolved slowly with a minimum of government intervention.
Others argued for greater intervention, saying that
government is inviting malfeasance by setting up a new
class of financial institution, but abdicating supervisory
responsibility.
The
Fox plan--which would create up to 650 microfinance
institutions that would make loans and also accept deposits
at about 4,000 locations nationwide--would answer a
critical need among the poor, said one World Bank official.
"The banking infrastructure is usually not where
poor people live, and those that are, don't often make
poor people feel very welcome", said Elizabeth
Littlefield, a World Bank director and chief executive
of a microcredit think tank in Washington called C-GAP.
"So they rely on informal places for putting their
savings, which are often less secure. Research suggests
having a safe place to put savings is valued more by
the poor than credit."
The
ability of lenders to accept deposits is the key to
the institutions' self-sufficiency, which must be the
long-term goal of any microcredit program to reach an
ever-larger number of borrowers. That goal is still
a distant one: only 65 of the 10,000 known microlending
operations in the world are self-sufficient. The rest
depend on donor funds to continue operating.
On
Tuesday in San Baltasar, Arguello and 25 other
women organized by Compartamos, the largest microfinance
company in Mexico, met to make payments on their existing
loans. Peer pressure is high to make good. Less than
0.5% of the loans that the company has made here and
elsewhere, have defaulted.
Antonia
Vargas made the last payment on a $1,000 loan she used
to buy a powerful sewing machine, which she uses to
earn money, making pants and other apparel. "I
would have never been able to buy this without the loan,
" she said, pointing to the gray machine dominating
her humble living room.
By
Chris Kraul, Extracted from Los Angeles Times,
October 12, 2001.
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