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DHAKA, Feb 24, 2011 (IPS) - Twenty-one years ago, Munni Akter and her husband Shafiuddin could hardly afford two meals a day.
The couple lived in Savar, some 35 km from here, and had no income. That is, until they turned to the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (Brac), the world's largest non-government organization working to reduce poverty.
"I was almost lost and had no skill to earn. But a neighbour told me that Brac lent money for small businesses for which they required no guarantor," 37- year-old Munni recalled.
"My husband and I wasted no time and appeared at the local Brac office to borrow money. Soon we found ourselves with some money to start vending on the streets and make profit," Munni added.
From the initial 5000 taka (40 dollars) she borrowed in 1990, her business has grown. Today, Munni has a small factory on the first floor of her two- storey concrete home in Dashkkhin Krinshnapur in Savar making sweetened puffed rice which is sold as far as 300 km southeast to the port city of Chittagong.
She employs 26 workers, and after paying labour, electricity and other costs, she has a clean profit of 1,000 dollars.
Millions of poor women like Munni have used loan money to successfully run their own businesses and free themselves from the curse of poverty, thanks to microfinance institutions like Brac.
Founded and introduced in the late 1970s, microfinancing is Bangladesh's success story. Recent studies suggest that over 11 million Bangladeshis have benefited from borrowings, making the country the global leader in the successful use of microfinance programmes.
Getting a loan from a microfinance institution (MFI) is hassle-free and client- friendly. These MFIs knock on the doors of their clients and require no formal paperwork. Anyone who lacks skills or assets will qualify for a beginner's loan that can lead to an advanced stage and bigger loans.
In Munni's case, after her first 5,000-taka loan, she took several more and successfully used them to expand her business selling sweetened puffed rice.
Since Munni paid back all her loans on time, she qualified for a second stage of borrowing known as Progoti where the borrower need not belong to a group. She was able to secure a loan of 450,000 taka (6,342 dollars) in three phases, the last tranche given in March 2010.
Despite debates about the differences between "getting out of poverty" and "staying out," numerous studies have revealed that this Bangladeshi invention designed for the poor has worked. More than 40 other countries now replicate the Bangladeshi microfinance models.
MFIs offer small loans at reasonable interest rates of up to 18 percent yearly, mostly to women who would not qualify for conventional loans.
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