The end of world poverty as we know it. Or not yet?

kiva running out of loans

Faithful readers know of our blog’s social project we started back in November. We fund microfinance projects via Kiva, an online non-for-profit “brokerage” service between those in need of a micro finance loan and those willing to fund them.

Over the past months, readers from The Road, friends, friends of friends, and colleagues jumped in, and joined our Kiva lenders’ team. At this moment, we total over $6,400 of loans (Check here for the latest status)

The system seems to work well, and after the initial investment in loans, the repayments started to come in two months after the first loan. At this moment, about US$2,000 of loans have been repaid.

It seems Kiva’s success caught on real fast. This week alone, they allocated US$1.8 million of microfinance loans. Quite impressive, if you consider that a typical loan is given in chunks of $25.

Kiva’s success is that big that often, like tonight, you log onto their site, and… they have ran out of people to allocate loans to.

A bit frustrating, knowing that at this moment I am ‘sitting’ on $600 of repaid loans I would like to reinvest, but on the other hand, their success and apparent efforts to keep up with the success of microfinancing, and particularly success of the brokerage-system of Kiva, shows a difference can be made.

As I am, right now, looking at the screen of the lenders page, searching for people to allocate loans to, I only see grey’d-out fields of entrepreneurs with the remark ‘Fully Funded’, I am thinking of the song of John Lennon. And “imagine” that maybe that will be, one day, the status of poverty in the world. “We are sorry, but we no longer have people in need”.

Call me a dreamer.

“Change Starts Here” broke the $5,000 mark!

one of the loans we made today: the Lim Vuthea Women's group in Cambodia

“Change Starts Here”, our blog’s social project just broke the $5,000 mark!

Tonight, we received a series of repayments on loans we previously made and reinvested them in the following new Kiva micro financing projects:

- Kamil Akhmadov in Azerbaijan: $50 (purchase of two calves)
- Marcia Mejia Women in the Dominican Republic: $25 (expand shop inventory)
- Lim Vuthea Women in Cambodia: $50 (repair of their house)
- Evelyn Dionela in the Philippines : $50 (purchase of a freezer to store the food she sells)
- Altantsetseg Duden in Mongolia: $50 (expand the assortment of books she sells in her store)
- Norma Andia Conga Women in Peru: $50 (expand the variety of items in stock for their stores)
- Khayyam Tagiyev in Azerbaijan : $50 (spare parts for his taxi)
- Laure Agbogbe in Togo: $50 (expand her cosmetics business)

We also welcome Mark, from Toronto-Canada as our 14th Kiva team member.

You can follow the progress of our project on our scorecard or join in the discussions on our discussion forum

Micro-financing, the snowball effect

african hands

Our blog’s social project, allocating micro-finance loans through Kiva, contributed to a success story it seems:

Up to date, Kiva allocated loans worth a total of $56,393,860 to entrepreneurs around the world.
Only this week, 3,299 businesses were funded. 14,000 lenders gave over $1,000,000 of loans. Again: in ONE week.

To date, we fundraised $3,725 on our blog and the Road’s team members contributed another $585 directly.
The people we gave loans to already paid back $482, a sum I’m allocating to new micro-entrepreneurs in the developing world.

The Road’s lenders team now has 11 members (Alexander in Canada was the latest to join in. – Welcome Alexander!)

The Kiva project is that big a hit that today they ran out of projects to be funded: “Currently, we are experiencing a traffic spike and all previously fundraising loans have been fully funded.”

The snowball effect of doing good…

Follow the progress of The Road’s Kiva project and join the project’s discussion thread on our discussion forum.

An update on our micro-finance project

Samon Chork Group in Cambodia , one of our Kiva loans today

Today, I allocated the final balance for the funds raised via the “Change Starts Here” kick-off post.

I also re-invested US$141 received as repayments for loans we gave in the past two months.

The loans given today were:

  1. Olawuni Emmanuel in Nigeria: $25 to increase stocks in her shop.
  2. Tinuke Tajudeen in Nigeria: $50 to increase her soft drinks stock in her shop.
  3. Mery in Peru: $50 for her shop’s beauty product stocks.
  4. Samon Chork Women in Cambodia: $75 to buy more cattle.
  5. Hermelinda Sinarahua in Peru: $50 for more food ingredients for her small restaurant.
  6. Mawusse Attila in Togo: $50 for her shop’s stock increase.
  7. Khalida Parveen Women in Pakistan : $100 for the repair of a rikshaw, a new donkey cart, and different tools.
  8. Nupcia Suarez in Nicaragua: $50 for a fence around her home so she can live more secure.
  9. Luaiva Tiamamana in Samoa: $50 to start her ice-cake business.
  10. Magdalena in Peru: $50 to increase the stocks of her shop.
  11. Sharofat Turaqulova in Tajikistan: $50 to buy a new stock of winter clothing for her shop.

I am also happy to announce the other Road’s team members have now allocated $350 of loans by themselves. The snowball effect.

Don’t just sit there! Join our Kiva lending team. It takes 10 minutes and you can allocate loans as small as $25 to any project you like. There is no overhead, you pay via your credit card, and when loans are repaid, they are repaid to YOU and not to the team.

Monitor our project’s progress on our score card.
Join the “Change Start Here”-thread in our discussion forum.

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