The Principles of Microfinance: Changing, Saving lives!


by Marc D’Silva 

Empowering Women through Microfinance

One Billion People Struggle to Survive on Less than a Dollar a Day

Imagine trying to get through the day without spending more than one dollar.  No latte.  No newspaper.  No taxi.  Most of us living in the United States will never have to face such a daunting challenge. And yet, one billion poor people living in developing countries are struggling right now to make it through today on that much money.  Tomorrow will be no different, nor the next day. 

In fact, as every day goes by, thousands more families will fall into extreme poverty, especially in Africa. Poor families, and women in particular, often require access to loans in order to lift themselves out of poverty.  Unfortunately, most banks do not consider poor women to be reliable customers.  These women have no choice but to turn to local moneylenders, whose interest rates often exceed 240 percent!  As a result, small expenses required for school fees, medicine, and funeral costs often turn into long-term, debilitating debt for these families.

Catholic Relief Services Helps Women to Escape Poverty through Microfinance Against this reality, Catholic Relief Services (CRS) offers low-cost, high-impact solutions to help poor women strengthen their financial situations.  CRS is one of the world’s largest, most respected international relief and development agencies.  Its programs touches the lives of more than 80 million people living in 100 developing countries every year.  And it does so with a high level of efficiency-94 percent of all donations go directly to programs that help people.  The agency works through a network of thousands of local nonprofit partners, who are well-known and trusted in their respective communities.

CRS currently supports a wide range of savings-driven microfinance programs designed to help poor women save and borrow small sums of money.  In this simple economic paradigm, poor women form groups of less than 20 members each and make monthly savings deposits of as little as 10 cents into a group fund. The accumulated savings is used to make small loans (as little as one dollar) to group members at reasonable interest rates.

Participating women use these loans to support small-scale entrepreneurship and other income-generating activities.  Just as important, the group fund provides a safety net for members in times of emergency.  Most decisions are made democratically by group members, including setting savings deposit minimums, approving loan requests, and setting interest rates.

The advantages of this savings-led approach are many:

  • This simple model is easily understood by rural, illiterate women, who both ensure that group rules actually serve the best interests of members and help other women to start their own groups.
  • Initial savings amounts, loan sizes, and interest rates are small and flexible enough to allow participation by even the poorest women-those living on less than a dollar a day.
  • Women gain the experience and confidence needed to address other social problems in their communities, ranging from health to education to local governance.
  • Banks gradually realize that women’s groups are outstanding, reliable clients.
  • Donor investments are more cost-effective and subject to lower financial risk, thus resulting in greater impact at a larger scale.

In the past several years, CRS has witnessed unprecedented growth and impact in its microfinance programming.  Currently, over one million poor women in 20 countries are participating in CRS-supported savings groups.  They have generated an astounding $21 million in cumulative group savings. Under any circumstances, these financial measures would be impressive outcomes in and of themselves. 

By integrating its microfinance programming into a longer-term goal of integral human development, however, CRS looks at these measures as a route to social empowerment and development.  Women who participate in savings groups are more likely than other women to secure equal decision-making authority in their families, to send their children (especially girls) to school, to raise healthier children, to hold elected office at the village level, and to spearhead community initiatives to address peacefully a wide range of social problems.

The Need to Reach Out to More Women

Even though CRS has already helped empower over a million poor women, this figure pales in comparison to the United Nations’ goal of reducing the world’s extremely poor by 363 million by 2015.   Much more can be done. With thousands of local non-government organizations (NGO) partners and decades of continuous experience in developing countries, CRS has the infrastructure, linkages, and community trust to scale up its microfinance program outreach quickly. 

CRS has demonstrated its ability to achieve high-impact results through its savings-led methodologies, and with a cost-effectiveness that is considerably below the global average.  Toward this end, CRS has set a goal of securing support for a Microfinance Lifeline Innovation Fund serving 36 countries, with an immediate goal of supporting an additional one million poor families by 2011.

For more information, go to www.crs.org, and listen to an interview with Mark D’Silva of CRS, who will be the guest on Saturday morning, December 19, on  The Catholic Business Hour radio show with host Dick Lyles. — Marc D’Silva is with Catholic Relief Services, serving four years as  country director of India (during the Indian Ocean tsunami and Kashmir earthquake) and as senior program director in Sierre Leone and Ethiopia during times of extreme conflict.  Mr. D’Silva will be interviewed on the Catholic Business Hour radio show by Host Dick Lyles on Saturday, December 19.