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“Laily Begum has become famous in Bangladesh. She is the public face of those who borrowed from Grameen Bank, the microfinance institution that creates opportunities for Bangladesh’s rural poor. Begum’s face has been on thousands of posters and leaflets, promoting the benefits of microcredit. Begum’s loan from Grameen was for a mere 500 taka (about £4 at today’s exchange rate), which at the time, 11 years ago, was enough to obtain a mobile phone. With this, Begum became possibly the first ‘village phone lady’ in Bangladesh, establishing a profitable business in letting fellow villagers make calls to sort out their business. In fact, her enterprise was so successful that Begum has moved onward and upward, now she and her husband – a former farm labourer, living on subsistence earnings – own a row of five shops, each let to tenants, and a small apartment block. Microfinance gave the Begums the chance to move from losers to (at least in a local context) winners in the game of capitalism.”
The Paul Gosling Report http://www.paulgosling.net/2008/09/microfinance-faces-meltdown-co-operative-news/
“The Grameen Bank has stayed true to its roots. It is a mutual organisation – owned by those (almost all women) who borrow from it. But it is now a giant institution, which owns its own skyscraper headquarters in Dhaka, has 7.5 million borrowers, over 24,000 staff, more than 2,500 branches and works in 82,000 villages. Since its first loan in 1974, Grameen has loaned $7.1bn, almost all of which has either been repaid or is being repaid. It charges interest on loans at 20%, which Grameen recognizes is not cheap, but covers its costs in collecting money in a rural environment where agents of the bank have to spend much time traveling on bicycles and mopeds over dirt roads.” Id.
“The people you see on Kiva's site are real individuals in need of funding - not marketing material. When you browse entrepreneurs' profiles on the site, choose someone to lend to, and then make a loan, you are helping a real person make great strides towards economic independence and improve life for themselves, their family, and their community. Throughout the course of the loan (usually 6-12 months), you can receive email journal updates and track repayments. Then, when you get your loan money back, you can relend to someone else in need.”
Kiva.org http://www.kiva.org/about
“The London Accord is a collaboration between investment banks, research houses, academics and NGOs to produce free research on climate change for financial investors. It is intended as an reference guide for investors in the climate change sector.
The London Accord is significant in that it is the largest cooperative project in the world on investment opportunities in avoiding climate change(about 7 million UK pounds). [1] (It is also significant in being a non government-funded initiative).
The London Accord was launched in March 2007 [2] and published its results on 19th December, 2007 launching them at a roll out meeting at Mansion House in London. These findings are freely available from its website.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_London_Accord
“The Co-operative Bank Plc is a commercial bank trading in the United Kingdom with headquarters in Manchester, England. It is an ethical bank, and refuses to invest in companies involved in the arms trade, global climate change, genetic engineering, animal testing and use of sweated labour as stated in its ethical policy. The ethical policy was introduced in 1992.[1] In 2002 the Co-operative Group brought the bank and Co-operative Insurance Society under the control of a newly incorporated holding society, Co-operative Financial Services Limited.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Co-operative_Bank
“Judged by standardized financial criteria, small businesses receiving collateral support through the SHARE program are high risk undertakings; but to the local SHARE member/depositor who knows the character of the borrowers and can experience first hand the quality of their products - the investments are sound.
The SHARE program of the Southern Berkshire region brought a human face back into lending decisions. Members of SHARE pointed to Rawson Brook goat cheese or Jim's draft horses, or Marty's Washing Machine Repair Service, or Bonnie's wool-knit tights and sweaters for children and knew where their savings were at work.”
The E. F. Schumacher Society; http://www.schumachersociety.org/
“BerkShares (www.berkshares.org) are a local currency for the Southern Berkshire region of Massachusetts. They were issued on September 29, 2006 by BerkShares, Inc. BerkShares are exchanged for federal dollars at participating regional banks and circulate at a wide variety of local businesses. View television coverage of BerkShares by clicking here, and other international, national, and regional news coverage by clicking here.” The E. F. Schumacher Society http://www.schumachersociety.org/local_currencies.html
“WHY ARE THEY CALLED HOURS? They are called HOURS to remind us that the real source of money's value is created by people -- our time, skills, and energy. The One-HOUR to $10 equivalence is based on the fair average hourly wage for Benton County. By encouraging people to think about the value of everyone's time, HOURS help bring equity to work. “
The Hour Exchange; http://www.hourexchange.org/drupal/node/5
“So....., how do we “localize” our economy, our collective decision making, and our local sustainability? First we plan, then gather the physical and human resources, hit the start button, and get underway. Governments are mired in planning, “paralysis by analysis”. Like the generals, they are are always planning to fight the next war with ideas and tools used to fight the last one.” LOCAL CURRENCY + LOCAL ECONOMY = LOCAL SUSTAINABILITY
-- The formula for local failure is to give your purchasing power over to the Boards of Directors of the Nation's mega-corporate empires.
By Jim Miller http://algaloildiesel.wetpaint.com/page/LOCAL+CURRENCY+++LOCAL+ECONOMY+=+LOCAL+SUSTAINABILITY?t=anon
“There are, at the local level, many hopeful signs that a shift toward sustainability is beginning. But there are also many discouraging signs that large political and economic institutions will resist change in that direction. Seeing the latter signs and the immensity of the challenge before us, we can easily drift into discouragement and inaction. Is it too late? Are recommendations for a peaceful energy transition hopelessly unrealistic?
Am I being fatalistic? Or simply realistic? Our cultural obsession with good news, promises, and hope is humanly understandably, but there comes a time when the best thing to do is to accept that a bad situation has developed and find intelligent ways to manage it.”
-- Richard Heinberg. The Party's Over – Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies, p. 236.
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