Gandhi Peace Prize 2000 Citation : Grameen
bank, Bangladesh There are few institutions that inspire faith in humanity even in the
an environment of material greed, soulless careerism, exploitation and pursuit of naked power, institutions that live with
the credo that “small is beautiful” even when the world is being besieged by the philosophy of the big. They are
the institutions that live with a soul committed to fighting the inroads of global homogenization, seeking to provide succor
to the deprived yet diligent common people and proving that unity can work miracles even in an age of growing individualism.
The Gandhi Peace prize 2000 is being awarded to one such institution which has been helping the marginalized masses to reject
charity and to master their own destiny instead. It has been helping them tap their innate capabilities of entrepreneurship,
thereby bringing them hope confidence and cheer. Here is a fraternity of perseverance and service that promotes dignity and
adherence to truth. Here is development which enabled millions of women from poor households to acquire a new meaning in life.
Here is development with a human face which is not populist but people-centred and which promotes self-help and self-respect,
values dear to Mahatma Gandhi. Professor Muhammad Yunus, economist at the University of
Chittagong, probably did not know that he was launching a revolution when he started his action project and lent a small amount
of money to a poor woman to help her build her own life. The success of this experiment gave birth to Grameen bank. This bank
radically reversed conventional banking practices with their emphasis on collateral security, practices which has given rise
to the witticism that the best way to get a loan in convince the banker that you don’t need one. Here is a new banking
system in rural areas that is based on mutual trust, solidarity, participation, peer monitoring and accountability. Its operations
indicate the faith of its founding father, Muhammad Yunus, that if financial resources are made available to the poor on terms
and conditions that are appropriate and reasonable “these millions of small people with their millions of small pursuits
can add up to create the biggest development wonder.” The success of grameen bank has won international acclaim and
emulation. With its participatory approach, emphasis on women entrepreneurs, women’s empowerment and employment creation,
the microcredit projects have come to be hailed as a very promising approach to poverty eradication. Mahatma
Gandhi gave the world a talisman “Whenever you are in doubt or when the self becomes too0 much with you apply the following
test Recall the face of the poorest and weakest man whom you have seen and ask if the step you contemplate is going to be
of any use to him. Will he gain anything by it? Will it restore him to a control over his life and destiny? In other words
will it lead to Swaraj for the hungry and spiritually starving millions? Then
you will find your doubts and your self melting away” Grameen bank, Bangladesh is an invitation par excellence, which passes the test with great
elan | Europe's Senior Economist Citation (and only journalist to be at founders meeting of European Union's original hope
to be a peace brand) The Importance of Dr Yunus By Norman Macrae The
Nobel Peace Prize for 2006 was controversially awarded, in Oslo,
to a “ banker for the poor” in usually basket case Bangladesh..
Since the microcredit system pioneered by this
Dr Muhammad Yunus really has lifted record millions of Banngladeshi women from
the world’s direst poverty. During his February 2000 book launch in London of “Creating a world without poverty
– social business, future of capitalism” we invited 30 people to have lunch with him at
the Royal Automobile Club, St James, - and I thrill fully to his stated aim to “harness the powers
of the free market to solve the problems of poverty” To
his fans’ delight and astonishment , he is achieving
exactly that. In the past quarter of a century, his Grameen bank has lent (without
collateral or lawyers) billions of dollars to millions of poor women in the previously starving villages of Bangladesh., and
has got an extraordinary 99% repayment back. .His often- illiterate
customers have started millions of successful small businesses in unimagined
fields like mobile- telephone- ladies and saleswomen of the world’s cheapest
yoghurt. All the successes have been won by keeping costs incredibly low. A
banking operation that would cost Goldman Sachs $100 in New York or London
would cost Grameen in Bangladesh well under 100 US cents. This
is a huge development in human history. Money can now be directly channelled into productive use
by the world’s poorest billion people, solving problems statesmen won’t yet believe..
. Microcredit would best woo poor Afghans off growing heroin., which
drug - barons buy from them at pence per gram,. then sell that gram in London for up to
£100 ( not a distribution system with the needed cheapness
and efficiency at which microcredit excels). Yunus would set Afghans, like Bangladeshi,
more profitably selling yoghurt instead. Yunus’s winning ways with Islamic women should work even
better with unveiled African mommas, whose fertile soil plus free farm
trade with Europe can start a huge African farming revolution.
Most bizarrely. efficient because cheap lending to the poor has emerged to work its
miracles. , just as crashing because mega-costly banking to the rich threatens to cause some sort
of initially inflationary world slump . Words like
“inflationary” and “slump” will soon prove dottily incompatible,
but the west is dotty in assuming only manufacturing must move to cheaper lands. Bigger
threats or crashes or wise competitive changes face the three occupations our politicians have deliberately
made more expensive by cartelising or otherwise protecting, them - our farms, our lawyers , and now our
banks, The rulers of oil-rich lands have similarly made their oil crazily
too expensive ( see this article’s final paragraph for the most probable results).
. That sets a staccato agenda for this article. We had better start by
examining how microcredit for the poor almost accidentally , without local politicians
noticing and thus trying to stop it, came about
START IN A STARVING VILLAGE During
Bangladeshi’s terrible famine year of 1974, Dr Yunus ( who had won his doctorate in economics in
an American university) was back in his 1940 birthplace of Chittagong,
as professor of economics at the university there. He took a field party of his students to one of the famine-threatened
villages. His group analysed that all 42 of the village’s small businesses (such as tiny farm plots and
market stalls) were indeed going bust unless they could borrow a ridiculously tiny total $27 on reasonable terms. First
thought was to give the $27 as charity. But Yunus lectured that a social business dollar, which
had to be paid back after careful use in an income-generating activity, was much more effective
than a charity dollar, which might be used only once and frittered away. The “careful use”,
says Yunus, “means that the moment you bring in a business model , you become concerned about the
cost, the revenue, how to bring more efficiency, new technology., how to redesign, each year you review the whole thing.
Charity doesn’t bring that whole package.” Mercifully, with close overwatch by the students, all those
first 42 loans were fully repaid, and lent back. After nine years of further experiments, Yunus in 1983
founded his Grameen (which means Village) Bank. Its priority was to make loans that were desperately needed by the poor.
This is the reverse of the usual banking priority , which is first ( and in credit
crunches only) to make the safest loans , those to the rich who can provide collateral,, . In
the next 23 years, Grameen provided $6 billion of loans to poor people with that astonishing 99% repayment
rate. In 2006, it had 7 million borrowing customers, 97% of them women, in 73.000
villages of Bangladesh. Microcredit had by then reached 80% of Bangladeshi’s poorest rural
families . Over half of Grameen’s own borrowers had successful
small businesses, and had risen above the poverty line. The women predominated because they usually are the poorest people
in rural Islam, and proved best in paying back. When a Grameen
bank manager goes to a new village, he has entrepreneurially to search for poor but viable borrowers . He earns a star if
he achieves 100% repayment of loans, and other stars if his customers are fulfilling most of the 16 guarantees
that all customers are asked to pledge, ranging from intensive vegetable growing, through sending all their
children to school, to renouncing dowries. A branch with no stars would be in danger
of closing, so borrowers rally round with suggestions, such as which unreliable repayers to exclude. An
early income generator was the profession of telephone ladies. They borrowed enough to buy a cheap mobile phone from a Grameen
subsidiary. They draw fees for phoning to see if more profitable prices for crops
are available in a neighbouring village, and from anybody who wants to hire the phone to contact the outside world.
This is a job that could only become important in a microcredit setting. The owner of a mobile phone in richer suburbia would
not find many customers to hire her set. One special desire of Yunus was to improve the nutrition of poor children in Bangladesh,
and he formed a social business with the largest French food multinational. This Grameen-Danone test marketed
to find what sorts of fortified yoghurt Bangladeshi children would like. Although Danone at first wanted
large plants with refrigerated systems, Grameen won the debate to make them small plants who bought local milk. It hired very
cheap local distributors who knew where there were babies whose parents might buy yoghurt at a few cents
per bottle. To keep the price that low. Danone had to agree not to pay any dividend from the sales of the
yoghurt in Bangladesh, but its $1 million investment remains returnable and it has learnt a lot
about sales of a new product in poor countries. A French water company is forming a similar social business
with Grameen to remove arsenic from Bangladesh’s rural water supply ; and President Sarkozy
envisages a course to train French experts in spreading Yunus’s ideas at one of
France’s grandes ecoles..Some American computer concerns ( including Bill Gates) may join
to find the best way to establish computer centres in remote villages. The telephone ladies will then face
competition . but constant competition in new technology is one name of this game, which is why it should
also hurry forward genetic modification of crops in Africa,. Slump
ahead - Japanese style? If a Grameen branch consistently falls
below 98% repayments, it closes; if that first branch in 1974 had failed, it would have cost $27 ..In 2006
giant American banks grossly overlent on subprime mortgages, then sold these loans on in securitised
and even “derivatised” (ie, misleading) packages to weaker banks, who have been trying desperately
to hide the consequences from their shareholders ever since. The bad debts consequently held
by financial institutions worldwide are estimated at $200
billion by the most glib bankers, and at nearly $1 trillion., by the more independent IMF .Eiither
overhang is bigger than that at the start of 1929-33’s
great depression. There is still
a small risk of a 1929-33 in 2008-12, so read on for two more paragraphs of bad news. Most reputable historians of 1929-33
have concluded that the wisest advice given in 1929 was that by the Cambridge
economist Maynard Keynes, - namely, increase budget deficits before a slump strikes. That is not the view
of current European finance ministers, Their first plea has been that all banks should
be honest about the extent of their bad debts, . Eh? If each bank’s statement in early 2008 had been
appallingly honest about its share of bad debts, runs by depositors out of them
would quickly have accelerated far beyond anybody/s control. But
2008’s aptest cautionary tale is almost certainly Japan
in 1989. In its miracle decades up to the mid-1980s, Japan
had a relaxed system of banking to the poor, not unlike Yunus’s. The big companies like Nissan bought their ball bearings
and other components very cheaply from tiny firms to whom Nissan’s own bankers lent without
collateral or lawyers. Then Harvard taught Japan its factories should
buy components by computer just in time from bigger firms.. Japanese banks switched to lending only to
the rich, and ballooned real estate prices so that by 1988 one golf course near Tokyo
had a greater nominal land value than the whole US state of California.
When this bubble burst, all Japanese banks had bad debts, which the government helped them to hide (very much as western central
banks are now doing by letting banks turn their bad mortgages into safer gilts) .Japanese living standards stopped
rising dynamically, right until now. This is the sort of long stagnation-slump
into which western’ politicians are most likely leading us, and they will wrongly say it is an inevitable
result of China’s and India’s
pinching our jobs. |