Posts Tagged ‘home based business’
Micro Loan Repayments
How micro loans have made entrepreneurs out of supposedly simple rural people
The truth about human beings is that everyone is a born entrepreneur. Everyone has the desire of doing something on his own, but few people actually get the chance to do it. The problem is obviously money. Poverty in a third world country like India had become a vicious cycle; a trap that promised to kill whoever dared to cross its path. The poor people had all the initiative in the world, but where would they get the money to do anything? This is the premise which made Professor Mohammad Yunus start the Grameen Bank of Bangladesh in making micro loans available to economically- disadvantaged people. India borrowed the example and developed MFIs to give out micro loans to mainly rural women, though men were not left out.
A micro loan can do wonders for a person belonging to a low- income background. As said earlier, poor people don’t lack the initiative, all they need is the money. Once they got hold of micro loans, they had the freedom of starting their own small home- based businesses. Women engaged themselves in making stuffed toys, pickles, detergents, soaps, chapattis, etc. while men set up small shops or started a woodworking business.
Micro loans in India mark a turning point. The supposedly simple rural folk with nothing to show on their resumes became entrepreneurs. Their success can be easily measured by the 97% repayment of micro loans MFI’s in India have calculated. With micro loans in India, it’s been success all the way!
Micro Loan Success In Jharkhand
Women in Jharkhand become self- dependent with the help of micro loans
Micro loans in India have helped pave the way for empowerment of women throughout the country. Success stories from far- flung villages of India have made micro loans the buzzword in rural economy. At one time, these women had nothing to do except household work and looking after children. But now they are starting businesses and helping their own families economically and also employing other people as well. A small village called Gumla in Jharkhand has a success story that speaks highly of what micro loans and Self Help Group (SHG) initiatives have achieved so far.
Gumla is a tribal village with mostly economically – disadvantaged people. The district administration gave women from this village training in a variety of vocations such as making of soaps, pickles, detergents, and phenol. The training went on for 15 days after which they were given the option of being able to avail of a micro loan. Most women who underwent the training started their own home- based businesses or joined another SHG and started earning their living. One of the women is Nita Kumari who has joined an SHG and she makes pickles everyday. She is happy that she has been able to improve her family’s condition a lot.
Micro loans have actually enabled people like Nita Kumari to actually do something on their own and become self- reliant. Perhaps more than the money is the self- confidence that a micro loan can give to these simple folks.