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One Crore Micro-capitalists
Gurcharan Das
Chinamma was born a Devadasi but she refused to become a
prostitute. She would collect neem seeds in the forests of
Raichur district in Karnataka and earn Rs 12 a day. Her life
changed completely when she joined a self-help group which
helped her with a loan. She makes fertilizer today from the
same seeds and employs 10 women. Her sales are Rs 250,000
and profits Rs 50,000. Rising demand from businesses like
hers have lifted wages three times for the 12,000 women who
collect neem seeds.
There are 1.2 crore poor women like Chinamma across India
who take small loans to start businesses from microfinance
institutions, banks and NGOs. They buy a cow and sell milk
or invest in a sewing machine and stitch clothes. They may
open a vegetable shop or begin hundreds of other businesses.
Many of these micro-capitalists are the landless poor. What
started as NGO charity work has now become a self-sustaining
business with the entry of banks and microfinance companies,
who find the women have an excellent record of loan repayment.
Inspired by Bangladesh, this idea first caught on in Andhra,
and is spreading across India, gradually replacing the village
moneylender.
Chinamma’s story teaches us two ways of conquering poverty.
In the first, government gives money to the poor–free
electricity, subsidised food through the PDS and rural employment
guarantee schemes. In the second way, the state creates conditions
for people to help themselves. It builds roads and connects
people to markets; makes it easy for the poor to get titles
to their land and take credit against them. It provides vocational
training so they can get a job; it ensures reliable power
so that factories can run; and it reduces licenses and permits
so that people can easily start businesses. The first way
gives people fish; the second way teaches them to fish.
Chinnama’s sensible way, however, is under attack. The
Andhra government closed 50 branches of two microfinance institutions
(MFIs) last year for charging high interest rates. MFIs argue
that it is expensive to provide weekly service to the poor
in the rural areas. Their women customers prefer MFI loans
rather than cheaper, subsidized loans from the government’s
MFI for which “you must either have contacts or pay
a bribe and then wait 6-9 month for the loan”. In contrast
a young, dynamic MFI like SKS Microfinance delivers transparent
loans at their doorstep in 7 days.
The Reserve Bank agreed with the MFIs. It argued that competition
was growing among micro-lenders and interest rates had begun
to fall. It also observed that countries that had tried to
control loan rates had killed their microfinance business.
For this reason the micro-loan business is four times bigger
in Morocco and Bolivia where interest rates are ot controlled
versus Tunisia and Columbia where they are controlled. Chinamma’s
way will always be threatened in a populist democracy like
India. Micro-lenders will have to fight the political power
of money lenders, survive the envy of bureaucrats who run
government financial institutions, and battle unscrupulous
politicians who will find votes in capping interest rates
on micro-loans.
Chinamma thinks it criminal that chief minister Karunanidhi
gets away by waiving loans worth Rs 7000 crores while she
pays interest on her loans diligently. She wonders when voters
will realize that there is more dignity in her way of life
because it doesn’t depend on the false promises of politicians
or the charity of NGOs. Perhaps it will happen, she muses,
when the middle class begins to vote and takes a more active
role in politics.
Original was published in the Times of India and that you
are doing this with permission of the author. (http://ccs.in/gdas/?p=143#more-143)
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