UPDATED ON:
MONDAY, MAY 05, 2008
4:11 MECCA TIME, 1:11 GMT
 
NEWS AMERICAS
US gets Grameen micro-credit bank

The bank is in one of America's most ethnically-diverse neighbourhoods [GALLO/GETTY]

Grameen Bank, the micro-credit financier initially set up to help the poorest in Bangladesh, has opened its first branch in the United States.
 
The Bangladesh-based outfit known as the poor people's bank plans to hand out loans to the less well-off in one of the most ethnically-diverse neighbourhoods in the US.
Muhammad Yunus, who founded the bank in 1976, said the branch in Queens, New York City, was to cater to thousands of new immigrants without access to basic banking services.

"People consider this audacious," he told Al Jazeera's Kristen Saloomey.

 

"They think 'What you come from Bangladesh to do banking in NYC? That sounds so ridiculous. This is [the] city where [the] whole world learnt banking from'."

 

But the Nobel laureate said New York also had its share of poor people just like any other city "so we are actually working in [a] third world" environment.

 

"If this one works it will change the whole future of banking … in the whole world"

Muhammad Yunus, Grameen Bank founder

The bank and its founder earned the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize for helping thousands of poor Bangladeshis start their own businesses by offering them small loans.

 

Grameen America is targeting millions without a bank account and those with limited access to financial institutions, particularly women, to put them on the road to self-sufficiency.

 

To qualify for a Grameen loan, borrowers must be part of a group that meets weekly on financial management, pay back a certain percentage plus interest and set aside some savings.

 

A default by one member will result in the whole group being cut off from future borrowings.

 

Wendy Brown, who started a cleaning business with her sister a year ago, stands to benefit from a small loan as she plans to expand her enterprise.

 

"It means a lot to me in terms of buying supplies and being able to operate my business. I bought a laptop," she told Al Jazeera.

 

"You get to network with a lot of women who aspire to do a lot of great things, a lot of ideas, you can feed from that as well."

 

Muhammad Yunus said every person possessed an enormous capacity and gifts "but they never have the opportunity to unpack that gift".

 

He added: "If this one works it will change the whole future of banking ... in the whole world."

Source: Al Jazeera
Related:
Mixing principles with profit  
(15 Apr 2008)
Muhammad Yunus  
(10 Oct 2007)
Yunus: Poverty threatens peace  
(10 Dec 2006)
Micro-credit helps Egyptian women  
(19 Oct 2006)
Bangladeshi bank wins Nobel prize  
(13 Oct 2006)
Peace prize for microcredit pioneer  
(06 Sep 2006)
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