April 15, 2009

A Little Microlending Goes A Long Way

CBS Evening News: Web Sites Let Investors Do Good While Earning A Competitive Return

  • Play CBS Video Video The World Of Micro-Loans

    The difference between prosperity and poverty could very well lie in what's called "micro-loans." As Daniel Sieberg reports, these loans are having a big impact on the more than 99 million borrowers.

    • Urban designer Justin Moore lives in Harlem, N.Y. He invested $1,500 through the Web site Microplace.com, receiving a return of about 3 percent.

      Urban designer Justin Moore lives in Harlem, N.Y. He invested $1,500 through the Web site Microplace.com, receiving a return of about 3 percent.  (CBS)

    • A screenshot of the micorlending Web site Microplace.com.

      A screenshot of the micorlending Web site Microplace.com.  (CBS)

    • Microloan recipient Paulina Atahja lives in Villa El Salvador, Peru, where she makes ceramics. She used a loan smaller than $10,000 to hire workers and triple her business.

      Microloan recipient Paulina Atahja lives in Villa El Salvador, Peru, where she makes ceramics. She used a loan smaller than $10,000 to hire workers and triple her business.  (CBS)

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(CBS)  If someone loaned you $100, maybe it wouldn't change your life. But in many countries, it could be the difference between prosperity and poverty.

Tiny loans like these are called micro-financing. And last year, some $36 billion of them went to more than 99 million borrowers, as CBS News technology correspondent Daniel Sieberg reports.

With a new apartment in Harlem, 29-year-old urban planner Justin Moore doesn't have a lot to invest. But through a YouTube video, Justin learned how he could help the poor -- and his bank account.

The video was from Opportunity International. Opportunity clients use these financial services to start or expand a business.

"If I'm gonna have my money someplace, it might as well be someplace it's doing some good," Moore said.

On MicroPlace.com, Justin invested $1,500 in several different funds. He could select where his money went - in this case, to women borrowers in Peru.

Once Justin clicked on the "Invest Now" button, his money left Harlem and was transferred to purchase a security with Calvert Foundation Investments. Calvert bundled the money with other investments, sending a portion to a micro-lender named Edyficar, in Lima, Peru.

Finally, Justin's dollars ended up in the town of Villa El Salvador, 3,600 miles from his New York apartment, and into the hands of Paulina Atahja.

In her dusty, hillside home, Paulina's pottery business was struggling. She needed more clay, better paint and professional brushes. After 10 loans totaling less than $10,000, Paulina not only has better equipment, she's hired six neighbors and relatives and her production has tripled.

Paulina's traditional bulls, which legend says bring financial prosperity, sell in craft markets across Peru, for $5 to $10 a piece.

She says she doesn't know where she'd be without the loans.

Quote

If I'm gonna have my money someplace, it might as well be someplace it's doing some good.

Justin Moore
Microfinance investor
"Perhaps be unemployed," she said. "I really don't know."

"Without this loan my son would not have been able to attend college," she said, sobbing.

Globally, women like Paulina make up 85 percent of micro-borrowers. They're considered a better risk and their repayment rates average 97 percent.

Paulina meets twice a month with her loan officer; she's never missed a payment.

The average investor gives about $300, says Ashwini Narayanan, the general manager of MicroPlace, where Justin invested. Microplace is now offering real investment returns of between 2 to 6 percent, on par with commercial banks.

"People are hungry for the ability to somehow put their values into action, right? You know, 'I feel this way. I want to make a difference in the world. I want to have the tools that will help me make that impact in an effective way,'" Narayanan said.

When we showed Paulina a message from Justin, she was stunned that her benefactor was so young, and middle class. She asked us to give him two of her favorite works.

Justin's investment matures next year, on track to earn him about $45, 3 percent of his original $1,500 - proving that, while micro means small, it's by no means insignificant.

© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by AjaxOne April 17, 2009 5:29 AM EDT
If only it was open to Canadian investors as well.

For the tech savvy, there is www.mymicrofund.com. I think it offers micro capital for tech ventures in developing countries and funded by one guy.
Reply to this comment
by April 16, 2009 7:27 PM EDT
This is good news and I am glad to see this finally reported in a major western news media.
Actions such as these relate to people directly helping people, as opposed to some large impersonal gov agency taking funds from us and spending it as they see fit, with us having no say so as to where it goes.
This is more personal, and people can invest in ways that are meaningful to them.
Thanks for the story.
Reply to this comment
by sparklefur April 15, 2009 8:34 PM EDT
Please tell us how to buy one of Paulina's traditional bulls. They are so neat I really want one!
Reply to this comment

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