Replicating Microfinance in the United StatesJames H. Carr, Zhong Yi Tong Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 28/06/2002 - 387 من الصفحات "With the publication of this volume, knowledge and understanding of the practices of delivering micro-credit reach a new level of consolidation, and the stage is set for important further steps."—from the Foreword by Richard P. Taub, University of Chicago Microfinance was pioneered in the developing world as the lending of small amounts of money to entrepreneurs who lacked the kinds of credentials and collateral demanded by banks. Similar practices spread from the developing to the developed world, reversing the usual direction of innovation, and today several hundred microfinance institutions are operating in the United States. Replicating Microfinace in the United States reviews experiences in both developing and industrialized countries and extends the applications of microlending beyond enterprise to consumer finance, housing finance, and community development finance, concentrating especially on previously underserved households and their communities. Contributors include Nitin Bhatt, Robert M. Buckley, Bruce Ferguson, Elinor Haider, Chi-kan Richard Hung, Sally R. Merrill, Jonathan Morduch, Gary Painter, Sohini Sarkar, Mark Schreiner, Lisa Servon, Ayse Can Talen, Shui-Yan Tang, Kenneth Temkin, Andres Vinelli, J. D. Von Pischke and Marc A. Weiss. Replicating Microfinance in the United States is based on papers commissioned by the Fannie Mae Foundation and findings from an October 2001 conference jointly held by the Fannie Mae Foundation and Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C. |
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... programs in the United States and developing countries will be explored, including program characteristics, program ... Microenterprise Programs(Aspen Institute Self-Employment Learning Project 1992, FROM SOUTH TO NORTH 225.
James H. Carr, Zhong Yi Tong. Directory of U.S. Microenterprise Programs(Aspen Institute Self-Employment Learning Project 1992, 1994). On the basis of information obtained at practitioners' conferences and referrals, another 19 programs ...
... programs were much more integrated into the larger society, although gender discrimination might still exist. Peer groups in these lending programs helped them break the economic, not the cultural, isolation of running a microenterprise ...
... programs. Although the Grameen Bank and two other developing-country programs prohibited family members in the same ... microenterprise programs. 9. In my survey of U.S. program clients, respondents are 238 Chi-kan Richard Hung.
... programs, only the Mudzi Fund in Malawi had the professed goal of serving the core poor with a maximum-asset ... microenterprise on the right footing. In general, participants in U.S. peer-group lending programs were mostly the working ...