Project Salvador
Microlending
Karen
Adams Microlending Project
Organizing Women for
Self-sufficiency and Community Power
by Patty Lawless, Project
Coordinator
“We
never had a fund like this before. Women feel better about
themselves because of these loans. It is an opportunity for
women
to do for themselves; to know that we have value, we don’t just have to
depend on others.” Angela, president of the Cereto
Credit
Committee
The Cereto Credit Committee in north central El
Salvador is one of six new microlending committees that Project
Salvador started up in 2009 in coordination with three women’s
organizations in Suchitoto, Cuscatlan, bringing our total to
nineteen.
We had our annual evaluation of the Karen
Adams Microlending Project on July 28, 2009 with eighteen of the
nineteen committees present—over 70 women enjoying a morning of
icebreakers and group reflection on the gains and the challenges of
this work. They were asked to visually represent their
micro-enterprises and came up with some very creative renditions of
chicken coops and selling in the market, corn fields and mini-stores,
homemade earthen ovens for breadmaking, vegetable patches, and
pigs. Over 1200 loans have been made in the past four years,
from
$20-$200, benefitting over 620 women! Across the board, the
women
affirmed the value of their small loan funds in strengthening the
organization and power of women in their communities.
Funding
starts at a maximum of $50, but women can work their way up to loans of
$200. Each community will end up managing a fund of
$1500-2500,
depending on the size of the community and the demand of the
women. Funding is rolled out over a period of three years, as
the
women develop their capacity to administer the fund and use it as a
tool to organize their community. The fund becomes an asset
of
the community, available for many years to come.
The loans
are made at 6-12% annual interest, determined by each
committee.
This makes the project entirely self-sustaining. Interest is
used
to cover the expenses of the committee—accounting supplies, copies and
meeting and training expenses. Additional interest is used to
expand the loan fund capital and make more loans available to the
community.
Most of the committees conduct group meetings
with the women who are taking out the loans, to make sure they
understand the conditions of the loan, are able to deal with any
difficulties they are facing, and to strengthen the organization of the
women in the community. The Sitio Zapotal committee has taken
this outreach even further and has already made two visits to each of
the twenty women who received the first committee’s loans, to make sure
that their investments are going well and encourage them as they grow
in their independence and sense of self-worth.
This summer,
I was able to visit eight of the nineteen microlending
projects.
It was quite invigorating! We were able to meet with the full
group of women participants in six of the eight communities.
In
the other two, we met with the Credit Committee responsible for
administering the funds. I met with all six of the new
committees
funded in December 2008, as well as two previously-established
committees. It is helpful for the women to see a
representative
from Project Salvador as they get started, to reinforce the importance
of an honest administration and community ownership of the
funds.
This sense of accountability has enabled each of the communities to
break through a dominant mentality that the money is donated, so why
not just keep it and not pay back the loans.
Notably
all but one of the funds is functioning smoothly with 100% payback of
the loans. The one that is having difficulties is due to the
resignation of the treasurer. The committee is in the process
of
getting the books up to date. They are confident that they
have
not lost any money, but it was fortunate that we showed up and caught
what was going on before they did. PROGRESO, the organization
responsible for working with this community, is monitoring this
situation closely and will be deciding whether the community can handle
the administration of the fund or whether the money should be reclaimed
and moved to another community.
Project Salvador
will complete the funding of the current nineteen committees by 2012,
with another $12,000 needed to fully fund each committee ($9000) and
cover training and coordination expenses ($3000). If we are
able
to raise additional funds ($2000-3000 per community), we will add on
new committees in 2010 and beyond. We invite you to keep the
women of El Salvador in mind as you consider our funding appeal this
year. In the words of Marta Alicia of Sitio Zapotal, “It is
thanks to the solidarity of Project Salvador that we are creating a new
dynamic of integration of women into the life of our
community.
It is truly making a difference.”