Microcredit Evangelism

Published on

The Microcredit Summit held in Washington DC on 2-4 February was the first privately organised development summit. It succeeded in attracting a herd of presidents and prime ministers, queens and first ladies. Because they were there because they wanted to be, their participation may have done more for the cause than an official global summit. Hillary Clinton was the biggest draw. But perhaps by his presence while the hostage crisis continued over in Peru, it was President Fujimori of Peru who lent the most credibility to the summit and its Declaration that microcredit—small loans made to the poorest families, especially women, for self-employment—was a powerful antidote to poverty and its consequences.

The summit was very much a Grameen Bank affair and Sheikh Hasina Wajed had an opportunity to play a prominent role because of Bangladesh´s status as a world leader in microcredit. Muhammad Yunus, the founder of Grameen Bank, was eulogised by speaker after speaker. Official participation from other South Asian countries, however, was at a very low key, although this was made up by the many "practitioner participants" from the region.

Loading content, please wait...
Himal Southasian
www.himalmag.com