We're at a turning point in mankind's history. Forces are creating unprecedented global challenges AND the means to address them. As the head of Carnegie Mellon University’s Institute for Social Innovation, I'm lucky to often get some advanced glimpses into the future. My intent is to chronicle social innovations, the people behind them, and the ebb and flow of a planet in flux. This site is complimented by Globeshakers, my podcast show: www.siconversations.org/series/globeshakers
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Microfinance's Transition to Scale
Today's New York Times editorial by the Grameen Bank's Muhammad Yunus, Sacrificing Microcredit for Megaprofits, recommends a number of procedural and regulatory improvements to the "industry" of providing loans to the poor. Recent actions and reactions by for-profit loan providers, most notably in India, have dealt microfinance a "body blow". However, paradoxically, freedom and growth are often enhanced by establishing or better defining boundaries. I think that ultimately we'll look back on this moment in history as the time when microfinance became an even more robust and scalable way to eradicate poverty.
Labels:
Grameen Bank,
Microfinance,
New York Times,
yunus
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