Microfinance

Portrait photo of a woman

Microfinance was meant to help the world’s poor, but in Cambodia, it’s plunging people deeper into debt

Microfinance was hailed as a way to change the lives of hundreds of millions of people without access to credit. It worked so well that Grameen Bank founder Muhammad Yunus was awarded a Nobel Prize. But then, banks jumped in to get in on the profits. To manage high debt levels, Cambodians are migrating for work, eating less and even pulling their children out of school.

California group helps immigrants move into traditional financial sector

Woman pulled alive from rubble of Bangladesh factory collapse; expert calls for reform

Women and global economic and political stability

Bank becomes rich by lending to poor

Microlending in America

An ambitious social experiment will launch later this year that will test Americans’ ability and willingness not just to give, but to give to one another.

Grassroots savings plan helps many in tough times

A susu could be one of the safest places to park your money these days; this type of informal investment club got to the United States through immigrant communities.

Helping the poorest of the poor via “social business”

Muhammad Yunus won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 for micro-lending; now he plans to help the poorest of the poor through “social business.”

How the credit crisis affects micro-loans

Micro-loans have helped some of the poorest people in the developing world become entrepreneurs.

Lending Circles: Helping Immigrants in America Build Credit

For most of us, when we want to make a major purchase, we apply for a loan. But what if you have no credit score? That’s the case for many immigrants living in the US. One non-profit in San Francisco has adopted a novel way to try and change that.