A Nobel Peace Prize for Neoliberalism?

The Myth of Microloans

   By ALEXANDER COCKBURN
   http://www.counterpunch.org/cockburn10202006.html

The committee that gave Henry Kissinger the Nobel peace prize has
given it this year to Mohammed Younus, the economist who put the word
"microloan" on the map with the Grameen Bank in his native land of
Bangladesh. That's progress of a sort. But in terms of hot air, any
sentences linking "peace" with "Henry Kissinger" aren't immeasurably
more vacuous than the notion that microloans can help--to use the
language of the Nobel Committee's citation "large population groups
find ways in which to break out of poverty."

Throughout the late Eighties and Nineties, in the verbal currency of
first-world do-gooders, "microloans" became one of those magically
fungible words, embedded in a thousand Foundation and NGO annual
reports, like "sustainable". What could be more virtuous in terms of
prudent philanthropy than giving very small loans to very poor women?
Microloans breath healthful uplift, as divorced from the sordid world
of mega-loans (though not, it turns out, mega interest rates), as are
micro-brews from Budweiser.

The trouble is that microloans don't make any sort of a
macro-difference. They have helped some poor women, no doubt about
it. But in their own way they're a register of defeat. Back in the
early 1970s there were huge plans afoot to change the entire
relationship of the Third to the First World, to speed Third World
economies towards decent living standards for the many, not just the
few. At the United Nations radical economists were hard at work
drafting plans for a New World Economic Order. All that went out the
window and here are the caring classes thirty years later, hailing
microloans.

Microloans are micro-bandaids in a scale of things today where - to
take the example of India -- well over 100,000 farmers, including a
large number of women, have killed themselves because their federal
and state governments, plus large international institutions, have
promoted the savage priorities of neoliberalism.

As the economist Robert Pollin put it pithily when I asked him what
he thought of the award to Younus , "Bangladesh and Bolivia are two
countries widely recognized for having the most successful micro
credit programs in the world. They also remain two of the poorest
countries in the world."

In the statistical tables of human development Bangladesh ranks
139th, worse than India, with 49.8 per cent of its population of 150
million below the official poverty line. In the homeland of the
Grameen Bank, about 80 per cent of the people live on less than $2 a
day. A UN Development Program study in the early 1990s showed that
the total microcredits in Bangladesh constituted 0.6 per cent of
total credit in the country. Hardly a transformation.

Against this backdrop, what have microloans achieved? I put the
question to P. Sainath, author of Everybody Loves a Good Drought and
India's most outstanding journalist on rural destitution and the
consequences of economic policy. Yes, he said, microloans can be a
legitimate tool in certain conditions, as long as you don't elevate
the tool into a gigantic weapon. No one was ever liberated by being
placed in debt. That said, a lot of poor women have eased their lives
by using microloans, bypassing bank bureaucracies and money lenders.

But today the World Bank and the IMF, along with state-owned and
commercial banks are diving into microfinance. The microloan business
is fast becoming a gigantic empire, bringing back into control the
very banks and bureaucracies women have been trying to bypass.
Microcredit is becoming a macro-racket.

Sainath points out that the interest rates micro-indebted women are
paying in India are far higher than commercial bank lending rates.

"They are paying between 24 and 36 per cent on loans for productive
expenditures while an upper class person can finance the purchase of
a Mercedes at 6 to 8 per cent from the banking system."

The average loan of the Grameen bank is $130 in Bangladesh, lower in
India. Now, the basic problem of the poor in both countries is
landlessness, lack of assets. In the Indian province of Andhra
Pradesh, where there are thousands of microloan groups, land costs
100,000 rupees an acre, poor land maybe 60,000 rupees--over $2000.
$130 doesn't buy you the ranch, not even a good cow or buffalo. So
how many poor women have escaped the poverty trap in AP, Sainath
asks. "Try getting an answer."

"With that $130 the most basic assets do not come to you," Sainath
says. "The amount is tiny. Interest rates are high and the default
sanctions savage. During recent floods in AP, freelance journalists
came to a village where everything had been washed away. The first
people back in were the micro creditors threatening women, demanding
monthly installments from women who had lost everything."

Governments like microloans because they allow them to abdicate their
most basic responsibilities to poor citizens. Microloans make the
market a god.

Let's suppose USAID or some kindred agency decides to put $10 million
into microloans. What used to be an initiative of a group of women at
the village level, has become a high-profile, international funding
activity. Long before the first rupee is seen by women in a village,
NGOs, consultants, bank managers and their relatives have all taken
their cut. By the time the loan gets to the women in the village the
cost is prohibitive, with the very poor and women of low caste often
excluded. On top of this, some revolving-fund models require each
women to put in a rupee a day. But often women don't have a rupee a
day, so they go to the local moneylender to be able to repay the
microloan.

As Sainath says, microlending can be a useful tool but it should not
be romanticized as some sort of transformational activity. On that
plane it's useless. By contrast, as Bob Pollin stresses, "the East
Asian Tigers, like South Korea and Taiwan, relied for a generation on
massive publicly-subsidized credit programs to support manufacturing
and exports.

They are now approaching West European living standards. Poor
countries now need to adapt the East Asian macro-credit model to
promote not simply exports, but land reform, marketing cooperatives,
a functioning infrastructure, and most of all, decent jobs."

The trouble with publicly-subsidized credit programs is that they're
public and they're large and run contrary to the neoliberal creed.
That's why Younus got his Nobel prize, whereas radical land reformers
get a bullet in the back of the head.




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