Loyal reader Sandy passed along this fascinating tidbit, which I have yet to see reported locally:
Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus and his bank, Grameen America, is teaming up with the North Carolina State Employees’ Credit Union.
Here’s what’s interesting about Yunus: He won the Nobel for giving loans to people with no money; more specifically, to women working in third-world countries.
Sounds like trouble, right? Like just what led us to our current financial meltdown. But the “micro” lending has empowered people economically.
Here’s the other interesting Asheville tie: A couple of years ago, Yunus visited Asheville and one of Asheville’s great economic success stories, Mountain BizWorks, which specializes in giving small loans, and training people, to start their own small businesses.
Here’s BizWorks Executive Director Greg Walker-Wilson with Yunus.
Back to the story. From the Huffington Post:
This keeps getting better and better. While everything is crashing around us financially, Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke pledges his support to Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus and his banks for the poor in the US: Grameen America. Grameen will apply to act as a savings bank and will be partners with the largest Credit Union in the country, the North Carolina State Employee’s Credit Program, to provide microcredit for the poor in the US.
Here’s a CNBC video about Yunus’ move.
Sandy, thanks for the great tip. I’ll be watching this closely!
1 Comment
This is pretty fascinating… Ventures like the Grameen Bank and kiva.org (the world’s first person-to-person micro-lending website, empowering individuals to lend directly to unique entrepreneurs in the developing world) make a good case for the "pro" side of globalization. I may never travel to a third-world country in my life, but it’s getting easier and easier to make a difference in a place where a little bit of money can have a big impact.
It’ll be interesting to see how to SECU partnership plays out, and what that will mean to credit union members.
Also, Greg W.W. will be leaving Bizworks after 11+ years, this June, to go on a volunteer assignment with his family to Colombia, S. America. He will be missed.