Since the 1980s, millions of impoverished people around the world
without access to banks have been able to take out tiny loans to start
businesses. Nobel Prize-winning economist Muhammad Yunus, who
established the first microfinance bank in Bangladesh and launched the
modern microlending movement, claims microloans have lifted millions --
especially women -- out of poverty and spurred economic growth. But
recent studies cast doubt on microcredit's effectiveness. Borrowers have
been saddled with multiple loans at exorbitant interest rates, often
having to borrow from loan sharks to make their microcredit payments.
Economists fear overindebtedness could make borrowers even poorer and
that a possible credit bubble could burst. Others worry that in recent
years, for-profit investors have swarmed to the field, attracted by high
returns on investment. Some governments have capped microlenders'
interest rates, but the industry hopes to forestall regulation by
adopting voluntary consumer protection measures. CQ Global Researcher Evaluating Microfinance v.4-4 |
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