A New Recipe for
Peace
By
Ntai
Bagshaw,
culled from THISDAY, October 14,
2006
Want to know how bad are things
in Nigeria? Ask the female traditional cloth-dyer in Abeokuta seeking for
N3,000 to expand her business. Or cane-weaver in Calabar in earnest need of
N5,000 to purchase larger bundles of cane to meet rising demand. Meager as
these monies are, these lowly traders depend on it to keep them off the
streets.
Believe it or not the incidence of poverty across Nigeria is overwhelming.
Were it not for this gripping phenomenon, the nation’s on-going economic
reforms would have been remarkable. Extreme poverty is the most serious
problem in Nigeria and other parts today because it is the root of many
other problems. HIV/AIDS and other infectious diseases, the Niger Delta
crisis, environmental degradation, illiteracy, malnutrition, human rights
abuses, human trafficking, narcotics trafficking, illegal immigration,
ideological intolerance, tyranny, debt, slavery and so on – have their roots
in this seminal evil.
Regrettably, over the past decades vast resources have been deployed in the
fight against poverty, with generally mediocre results. Yet one man has
proven that instituting a workable microcredit system for the poor is a sure
way to fight poverty: Mohammed Yunus.
Widely referred to as the inventor of the microcredit movement, the
Bangladeshi economics professor and the Grameen Bank he founded was
yesterday named winners of the prestigious Nobel Peace Prize for advancing
economic and social opportunities for the poor, especially women, through
their pioneering microcredit work. Over the last three decades, Yunus has
demonstrated that turning conventional banking on its head will accomplish a
world of good for millions of impoverished people. Imagine a bank that loans
money based on a borrower’s desperate circumstances - where, as Yunus says,
“the less you have, the higher priority you have.”
What began as a modest academic experiment has become a personal crusade to
end poverty. Yunus’s novel idea of dishing out microcredit to the poor came
while chatting with a shy woman weaving bamboo stools with calloused fingers
in his native Bangladesh. Sufia Begum was a 21-year-old villager and mother
of three when the economics professor met her in 1974 and asked her how much
she earned. She replied that she borrowed five taka (about N130) from a
middleman for the bamboo for each stool. Almost that entire loan went back
to the lender. “I thought to myself, my God, for five taka she has become a
slave,” Yunus said in an interview. “I couldn’t understand how she could be
so poor when she was making such beautiful things.” The following day, he
and his students did a survey in the woman’s village, Jobra, and discovered
that 43 of the villagers owed a total of 856 taka (about N3,500). “I
couldn’t take it anymore. I put the 856 taka out there and told them they
could liberate themselves,” he said,” and pay him back whenever they could.
The idea was to buy their own materials and cut out the middleman.
Interestingly, they all paid him back, day by day, over a year, and his
momentary generosity grew into a full-fledged concept that came to fruition
in 1976 when he began to set up experimental microfinance projects in rural
parts of Bangladesh until he formally established Grameen Bank in 1983. As
the bank’s founder, his ideas have changed the face of rural economic and
social development forever. In the years since, the bank says it has loaned
290.03 billion taka (about N4.7 trillion) to more than six million
Bangladeshis.
Since Yunus gave out his first loans in 1974, microcredit schemes have
spread throughout the developing world and are now considered a key approach
to alleviating poverty and spurring development. Nigeria isn’t left out of
the fray. Indeed if awards were given for thinking up new ways of fighting
poverty in the country, Magnus Kpakol would win lots of them. As National
Coordination of the National Poverty Alleviation Programme (NAPEP), Kpakol
has come up with several ingenious microcredit schemes targeted as the poor,
the most recent being the laudable Multi-Partner Micro Finance Scheme (MPMF),
which involves a partnership between state and local governments and the
private sector, particularly the banks.
Yet, despite Kpakol’s efforts, a lot more grounds need to be covered. For
starters, it helps to know the nature of a problem in order to solve it.
Poverty is slavery caused by exploitation, and in Nigeria it is enforced
through corrupt institutions. This parable sheds more light: Late General
Abacha skims cash from national enterprises and stashes the money in Swiss
bank accounts. Ministers extort kickbacks to approve government contracts
(one got the boot last week). Bureaucrats entangle every transaction in
mountains of red tape, requiring payoffs to expedite paperwork. Doctors and
nurses steal drugs and sell them on the black market to supplement meager
incomes. NIPOST employees pilfer mail. Policemen impound vehicles if hapless
drivers fail to bribe them. Prospective educators pay exorbitant sums if
they want a precious teaching certificate. Tax evasion is a national
pastime. People disregard traffic signals and crowd in lines, occasionally
triggering public stampedes. Domestic help and common labourers are
routinely ill-treated because they have no effective recourse, legal or
otherwise. Parents send their children into the streets to peddle or beg,
abusing them if the youngsters return home without their daily quota of
money. Property crime is so rampant that people padlock spare tires to their
cars and surround their homes with high walls topped by broken glass and
razor wire.
Under such sordid conditions, debt relief, development aid and favorable
trade rules do not solve poverty. They only strengthen the hand of the
oligarchs and slum lords who are the root cause of poverty in the first
place. Environmental improvements through transparency, anti-corruption,
property protection, and rule of law initiatives are tough to implement
without major social upheavals if not bloodshed.
So, enterprise is the only effective, humane way to solve poverty in a
country like ours that is bereft of public trust and cooperation. The
problem with enterprise is that it too favours the rich, the connected, the
educated, and the strong. This is where microcredits and microfranchises
become relevant, serving as the best way of empowering the poor to run their
own enterprises. Unfortunately, the conventional banking system excludes
this group from its services. Yunus reminds us that for two-thirds of the
world’s population, “financial institutions do not exist.” Yet, “we’ve
created a world which goes around with money. If you don’t have the first
dollar, you can’t catch the next dollar.” It was Yunus’ notion, in the face
of harsh skepticism, to give the poorest of the poor their first dollar so
they could become self-supporting. “We’re not talking about people who don’t
know what to do with their lives. They’re as good, enterprising, as smart as
anybody else.” His Grameen Bank spread from village to village as a lender
of tiny amounts of money (microcredit), primarily to women. Yunus heard that
“all women can do is raise chickens, or cows or make baskets. I said, ‘Don’t
underestimate the talent of human beings.” No collateral is required, nor
paperwork for his loans - just an effort to make good and pay back the loan.
Yunus' Grameen Bank’s loans average about $200 and go toward buying items
such as cows to start a dairy, chickens for an egg business, or cell phones
to start businesses where villagers who have no access to phones pay a small
fee to make calls.
According to the bank, interest ranges from zero percent for loans to
beggars to five percent for student loans, eight percent for home loans and
20 percent for loans to businesses that generate income. Anyone can qualify
for a loan, but recipients are put in groups of five and once two members of
the group have borrowed money, the other three must wait for the funds to be
repaid before they get a loan.
Grameen, which means rural in the Bengali language, says the method
encourages social responsibility. The results are hard to argue with - the
bank says it has a 99 percent repayment rate. It has branched out into
student loans, health care coverage, and into other countries. Grameen has
even created a mobile phone company to bring cell phones to Bangladeshi
villages. Yunus envisions microcredit building a society where even poor
people can open “the gift they have inside of them.”
If Nigeria is to reverse its history of poverty, the nation will have to
draw the right lessons from Yunus. At least, now we know that it doesn’t
take an arm and leg to effectively fight poverty. Yunus explains: “I saw how
people suffered for a tiny amount of money. They had to borrow from the
moneylender, and the moneylender took advantage of them, squeezed them in a
way that all the benefits passed on to the moneylender and none remained for
the borrowers. So I started by making a list of people who needed just a
little bit of money. And when the list was complete, there were 42 names.
The total amount of money they needed was $27. I was shocked. Here we were
talking about economic development, about investing billions of dollars in
various programmes, and I could see it wasn't billions of dollars people
needed right away. They needed a tiny amount of money.”
If you think Yunus took this as some form of charity, think again. He did
charge some interests on the loans he gave out to cover his operating costs
and get others to benefit from the scheme. Our banks can take a tab from
this ….. For years, they have refused to lend to start-ups and micro
ventures, opting rather for the big fishes. The dismal operation of the
Small and Medium enterprises Equity Investment Scheme (SMIEIS) is a case in
point. Yet Yunus explains that his experience shows that poor people were
repaying loans than rich people “because Bangladesh has a tradition of rich
people who borrow money from the big banks and hardly pay it back.”
A Fulbright Scholar at Vanderbilt University, Yunus bagged his Ph.D. in
Economics in 1969. Later that year, he became an assistant professor of
Economics at Middle Tennessee State University, before returning to
Bangladesh where he joined the Economics Department at Chittagong
University. Yunus has been globally recognised for his work at Grameen. The
65-year-old economist says he would use part of his share of the $1.4
million Nobel award money to create a company that would make low-cost,
high-nutrition food for the poor. The rest of his share, he adds, would go
toward setting up an eye hospital for the poor in Bangladesh.
Yunus has shown why we must change our mindset if we are to fight poverty
and win in Nigeria. Poverty yields to growth when local enterprises succeed.
And the most efficient way to ignite and fuel this virtuous entrepreneurial
cycle on a scale large enough to move the dial in the country is through
microcredits and microfranchises.
Ultimately, this is the solution to the nation’s poverty.
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