Friday, October 13, 2006

What's next? Micro-health care, micro-food?

Today, Muhammad Yunus was named the winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for his work with microcredit aka the Grameen Bank. It's ironic for me because it was just yesterday that I was talking to a co-worker about this micro-revolution that has taken over the "do-gooder" world. She had just talked to a official from Accion International (Different from Accion Emprendedora) and had learned some of the criticisms about Yunus's model of microfinance.

Read the NY Times article, and you'll see that his model sounds just perfect. 99% repayment rate and 97% of loans to women! When I was a kid I learned that if something sounds too good to be true, it usually isn't. Now that analysis isn't based on hard facts, but how can the poorest of poor be able to pay back 99% of their loans without some other forces being involved?

So one of the things that turns out is that Grameen Bank relies on many government grants to stay afloat. And this whole women's empowerment thing? It might not be as true as it sounds either. Read this article. I had never really thought about the fact that just because you lend to a woman and make her pay it back doesn't mean she's the one that uses the money.

And is it really ideal to have every poor person in the world start their own business? Obviously entrepreneurs can't be risk-averse, that's what it means to be an entrepreneur. But if you can't put food on the table, are you really going to use the free, no-collateral $200 loan for starting your basket business or for feeding your children? The problem is that none of this can really be proven with hard facts. There's a lot of hypothetical situations, so it's hard to ever have a for-sure answer.

Maybe this whole micro thing is so big because it sounds really cool. I certainly thought so and got sucked into it. Micro-finance, micro-leasing, micro-entrepreneur, blah blah blah. What the hell does that all mean, and what makes something micro? Perhaps when we hear that prefix all of a sudden our minds are trained to think we are doing good for the world.

Here in Chile we call the entrepreneurs we work with microentrepreneurs, but I don't know if I really understand why. Sure they are micro compared to big entrepreneurs, but the real goal of Accion Emprenedora is that each microentrepreneur be able to hire a new employee. Well, that means that what we really want is for micro-entrepreneurs to become macro-entrepreneurs. I think that makes sense. Not everyone needs to be an entrepreneur, some people just need a decent-paying job. So what's our goal as Accion Emprendedora, make more micro-entrepreneurs or strengthen the existing ones so that they can have more employees and become more competitive?

One important lesson from David Bornstein's book on social entrepreneurship is that the reason social entrepreneurs are so successful is because they work within the communities they know best and never give up the hope and effort to change them. Note that it's two things, not just the never giving up, "entrepreneurial spirit" part but also the "own community" part. Most successful social entrepeneurs grew up or lived much of their lives among the situation they are trying to resolve, such as rural electrification in Brazil or education in India.

It doesn't mean Muhammad Yunus doesn't deserve the Nobel or that his work is pointless. Perhaps it's just that micro-credit was only effective for the community he came from, rural Bangladesh, and perhaps it can't work everywhere in the world.

One of my favorite messages from Jeffery Sachs' book, The End of Poverty, is that development works like practicing medicine (clinical economics). You have to diagnose each case separately. My sore throat and someone else's sore throat don't necessarily come from the same virus, so you can't just give us all the same remedy. Is micro-credit the answer that will save the world? Now, I don't think so.

If there's anything I' ve learned through this past year is that the more you do and the more you study about this whole development "saving the world" thing, the less you know. Those who think they have the answer, are usually really, really wrong. That's because there is no right answer.

My idea: let's keep empowering the people that know their community best and feel that they have the solutions for their community. Let's train more ethical leaders and have those leaders create even more leaders. The only "large-scale" international development organizations should be firms that go out to look for these people and support them. From what I know, that's what Ashoka and organizations like it does.

But really, as my wise friends in Oaxaca would say, ¿Quién sabe?


Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Did I really do all of this?

This past weekend I:
  • Trekked through and rapelled down a cliff in the Andes
  • Biked through a small Argentinian community on a beautiful and sunny day to visit 2 wineries, a wine museum, and an olive oil factory
  • Tasted and learned about the differences between Malbecs, Borgonas and Torronteses
  • Spent a whole day wandering around Mendoza - walking a little, having some artesanal chocolate, walking some more, eating some gelato, walking a little more, eating cheap gourmet lunches, and so on
  • Ate, for about $11 US, a piece of Argentinian filet mignon with spinach a la crema and a glass of locally made Cabernet
  • Discovered alfajores - a chocolate or sugar covered shortbread cake filled with dulce de leche or fruit marmelade
  • Brought home two bags filled with wine, alfajores, clothes, Argentine leather goods, etc.
A little too indulgent at times, but learning about wine is simply great fun. I just hope I don't turn into Miles from Sideways soon.

Not bad for about the cost of one or two nights stay and dinner in a medium-priced hotel in New York or London!

Apoorva

Monday, October 02, 2006

The fight for normalcy

After exactly one month in Santiago, I finally have settled in to a place with internet access and comfort. I moved to a room in a different part of Santiago, a little farther from work than the old place with the spawn of the devil children, but much more relaxing and comfortable.

It's so nice to get a good quality home-cooked meal and be able to watch the news or a movie with peace and tranquility. It's funny how the little comforts like that can really affect the whole experience. I became more productive at work and generally happier. (I also realized that I am an internet addict, but it is the beacon of globalization and a wonderful thing that keeps me informed, so who cares)

I cannot believe a month has passed already. I can't say that time has flown because that's cliche and it really hasn't gone that fast, but it's gone fast (ah the contradictions).

Work has gotten a tad bit more interesting, as I've gotten briefed about my upcoming assignment which has more to do with Accion Emprendedora and not so much with the DUOC Universidad Catolica. This new project is to do the research and development work for the financial sector of AE.

What AE wants to become its own lending institution that gives entrepreneurs microcredit. It's an ideal situation because during their tutoring and classes, they learn about and monitor all the entrepreneurs, so they know who would be a good person to lend to - it's kind of like the way a bank in the US does a credit check. I think it's the first of its kind not-for-profit bank in which the interest paid goes back into funding the organization and more loans. (UPDATE 10/17/2006: That statement is totally wrong. Turns out what I was talking about is a microfinance institution, and there's tons of them. I called myself out)

No one really knows much about how this would work, and there's lots of other micros - micro-leasing, micro-factoring - that can become options in this bank: BanAccion. I'll be spending much of my time doing this research to modify and improve the proposal to a point where it can be presented to funders and international development organizations (World Bank, etc.).

Exciting and challenging, I like it.

Greetings from my peaceful and quaint new home,

Apoorva