An Azerbaijani Christmas
Kiva is once again taking on an Eastern European/Central Asian flavor. As you check the website from now until the end of the year, you should see a high concentration of Bulgarians, Azerbaijanis, Moldovans, Tajikistanis and the like.
There are two factors strongly at play here. 1) The presence of many highly-dependable and scaleable micro-finance institutions in that part of the world and 2) The fact that loans from these regions are the least desired on the site. Recently, it's been taking 1 day on average for a loan to become fully funded. The Azerbaijani loans take 3.7 days to be funded on average and are only 30% larger in dollar amount. Why is that? Who knows...
Premal is in Kenya. Among other things, he is consulting with an ailing WEEC and helping kickstart our partnership with BRAC in East Africa. WEEC, as many here know, suffered a huge loss with the passage of Jedidah Waigwa last Spring. Ever since then, they have had trouble moving forward and are experiencing over 30% delinquency across their Kiva portfolio. This has raised an important question inside our organization: How much should we get involved in building the capacity of our partner base? How much should we intervene when a partner is in turmoil? In this case, we've pretty much made up our minds -- we are doing *alot*. More on that in the months to come...
BRAC -- the world's largest NGO(?) -- is a slightly sunnier development. BRAC is a modern marvel and has recently taken its recipe for microfinance into the eastern shores of Africa. As a Bangledeshi organization moving continents, one might perceive potential difficulties in setting up operations. None-so-far from everything we've heard. Interest rates: relatively low. Repayment rates: relatively high. Portfolio growth: extremely fast.
Premal had significant cargo to carry. The Kenyan and Ugandan border crossings can be intimidating. How would they react to a party with 25 cameras? Often, governments want to get into your goods. We haven't heard back, but I assume he arrived safe -- cameras and all. Often, cameras are a surprising last mile barrier between borrowers and thousands of dollars in low cost debt pouring through the Kiva website.
We have a donor -- Laurent Drion of Brussels -- who makes sure that lack of cameras are no excuse. Laurent, a venture capitalist, started one of the biggest Macintosh distribution businesses in Belgium. The man moves consumer electronics -- now to Africa. Thank you Laurent. Soon, cameras will be flashing for BRAC in Tanzania, Uganda and Southern Sudan. Sudan? You can do microfinance there? If anyone can, BRAC can.
Its the people who are more importaint then money and power
How can i help the people By fighting For them . And their FUTURE . FUTURE is a word no one should countroll . Ive placed all that I Have and am . Into believing In word FUTURE wirth people own ideas can help all if only given a chance . see what iv been threw .. Hope helps others . Im looking for partners . FUTURE is like a country and people and their ideas are the global self suporting infranstruture , Best By KGA of www.futurevisionaries.com
Azerbaijani Loans
I'd like to address your comment about not knowing why the Azerbaijani loans take so long to fun. I personally think it's 1) because the loan descriptions are usually very short and impersonal and 2) because the photographs are not at all engaging. Could you speak to the field partners about trying to make these two items more marketable? I'm certainly not passing judgment on the value of the loans; I'm simply trying to help them get funded more quickly.
http://www.kiva.org/lender/nicolehiren








Big fan of Kiva, soon to be a loaner
I'm new to social entrepreneurship, I'm still working my apparatus. Maybe a comic book that funds 100% to charity, something that taps geekdom's infinite wallets for the greater good.
Anyway, huge fan, soon as I get my stupid paypal addresses unwrangled I'll jump aboard with a nice matching donation for you guys. As far as I'm concerned, Kiva is as close to heaven as I'm likely to get in this world. I'm in SSF, if you ever want to chat.
Ant
www.livejournal.com/users/antdevamp