Néablog  

It is what it is, is what it is.


rss | atom

My favourite blogs
...by fellow MCers
The capacious hold-all
Why should I listen to you?
As above
Carbonated ink
A Wallaby Abroad
Singing while they sleep

My favourite blogs
...by innocent bystanders
How to learn Swedish in 1000 difficult lessons
librarian.net
Blind höna : på kornet
jill/txt
Radosh.net
Making light
Eating muffins in an agitated manner
Du är vad du läser
flânerie.org

Vanity
Home page
Guest book
Amazon Wish List

Frequently visited
Orange MC
MC in Outer Space
Cathouse webcam
Order of the Stick

Currently reading
Tigerdödaren Wu Song och hans vapenbröder - Berättelser från träskmarkerna 2 (Johan reading aloud to me)

Current hug count


*HUGS* TOTAL!
give _Nea more *HUGS* Get hugs of your own


Listed on BlogShares




0 Comments:

Post a Comment

 
I'd like to promote something I rather believe in - the kiva.org website, which is all about microfinance, more specifically microloans. I won't try to sound as if I know the first thing about economics, but this is how it works: Person A lives in a developing country, and needs a largish sum of money to start or expand a business. "Largish sum" in this case means from the equivalent of US$ 200 up to US$ 1200 or so - let's say 300 dollars. Too little for a bank to be interested in lending it, and anyway with banks there's security, and possibly an exorbitant interest rate, and so on. Instead, Person A contacts a local microfinancing institution, where he is investigated to see that he actually seems to be able to repay a loan, and that the money would be used to good purpose. When the local microfinanciers are satisfied, A's details are relayed to Kiva.org. They publish the information about A on their site. Persons B, C, D, E, F and G visit the site and decide to lend $25 each to A. A takes the money, builds an extension to his shop or some extra stock or whateveer it was he needed the money for, and proceeds to pay back the loan over 10 or 12 months. B, C, D, E, F and G are not rich people and none of them would have been able to lend $300 very easily, but $25 each is no great sacrifice. I know it sounds like something out of Bamse but lending money through Kiva is quite satisfying. Because it isn't charity, nobody needs to be beholden to us for anything, there is no non-rectifiable debt of gratitude (which I have come to realise is a very fundamental concept for Swedes - but I won't sidetrack into discussing that here.)

For a lot more detail, see the Kiva website. I'll just mention, too, that when somebody lends money they must use Paypal - and Kiva is the only organization that Paypal doesn't charge a fee from for using their service.

The banner below is supposed to show a different "Person A" each time you reload the page. It's got Javascript, though, so I can't promise that it'll work.

Labels:



  posted by Linnéa Anglemark at 22:17 0 comments


Sunday, October 07, 2007  
Powered By Blogger TM