Microcredit Under The Microscope
Suddenly, it appears, everyone is jumping on the microcredit bandwagon. The Microcredit Summit, organised in early February in Washington DC was only the latest and most high-profile activity (see accompanying article). The reasons for this trend are as varied as the players. Microcredit has the support of many women´s advocates who view expansion of microcredit as a potential bellweather for women´s empowerment. Multilateral development banks, in an era of budget cuts and disbursement reductions, are embracing microcredit as an opportunity for them to move away from the capital-intensive "development as charity" model to the potentially more profitable "development as business". But perhaps most significantly, the financial community has woken up to the fact that there is a great deal of money to be made in microlending, where interest rates can range from 20 to 100 percent.
Microcredit is often portrayed as a "win-win" option, wherein investors profit handsomely while the poor gain access to resources that allow them to help themselves. The reality, however, is not always so rosy.