Home Creators Posts Import Register Favorites Logout
hello everyone, I'm working on improving stability, uncached full files will take a while to load and imports are a bit backlogged both due to bandwidth. Thank you.
haven't archived this post yet. have a subscription? use the importer!

Downloads

  • QAA_Presents_Trickle_Down_E10_Little_Loans.mp3
  • QAA_Presents_Trickle_Down_E10_Little_Loans.mp3

Missing 1 full-res photo, 2 files.

Content

In the 1970s a new method of helping the poorest people in the world emerged: microlending. The idea is to give the very poorest people, those who live on less than two dollars per day, very small loans they can use to start businesses and serve their community. Thanks to the power of success stories and anecdotes of those helped by microlending, the idea caught on with philanthropists and governments in the west. The concept enjoyed the full throated endorsement of the Clintons, The Nobel Committee, the United Nations, and experts working in global development. But a dark side of microlending quickly emerged. Some loans came with unreasonably high interest rates. Certain microlending institutions harassed and threatened those who couldn’t pay.  Some of those who received small loans found themselves trapped in a debt spiral. The indebted even committed suicide to escape the loan. While this was going on, some owners of microfinance ventures profited to the tune of millions of dollars. In the 2010s, multiple studies began to discover that the benefits of microlending as a poverty cure were vastly oversold. Microloans could in fact improve a community’s economic base in certain situations. But they cannot and will not end poverty entirely, as its advocates claimed decades earlier.

How did the most powerful, wealthy, and influential people in the world buy into the exaggerated promises of microlending?

This series is brought to you by the QAA podcast. Thanks for supporting us on patreon!

https://qanonanonymous.com

Written by Travis View. Theme by Nick Sena (https://nicksenamusic.com). Additional music by Pontus Berghe & Nick Sena. Editing by Corey Klotz.

REFERENCES 

Banerjee, Abhijit and Duflo, Esther (2011) Poor Economics: A Radical Rethinking of the Way to Fight Global Poverty 

Bateman, Milford (2010) Why Doesn’t Microfinance Work: The Destructive Rise of Local Neoliberalism

Edited by Bateman, Milford and  Maclean, Kate (2017) Seduced and Betrayed: Exposing the Contemporary Microfinance Phenomenon

Collina, Daryl et al (2009) Portfolios of the Poor: How The World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day

Meyerowitz, Joanne (2021) A War on Global Poverty: The Lost Promise of Redistribution and the Rise of Microcredit

Rahman, Aminur (1999) Micro-credit Initiatives for Equitable and Sustainable Development: Who Pays? 

http://users.nber.org/~rdehejia/!@$devo/Lecture%2006%20Microcredit/extra/RAHMAN,%20A.%20Micro-credit%20initiatives%20for%20equitable%20and%20sustainable%20development%20who%20pays.pdf 

Roodman, David (2012) Due Diligence: An Impertinent Inquiry Into Microfinance

Roy, Ananya (2010) Poverty Capital: Microfinance and the Making of Development

Sinclair, Hugh (2012) Confessions of a Microfinance Heretic: How Microlending Lost Its Way and Betrayed the Poor

Yunus, Muhammad (2007) Banker To The Poor: Micro-Lending and the Battle against World Poverty

Yunus, Muhammad (2008) Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future of Capitalism

Wykstra, Stephanie (2019) Microcredit was a hugely hyped solution to global poverty. What happened?

https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/2019/1/15/18182167/microcredit-microfinance-poverty-grameen-bank-yunus


Files

Previews only

Comments

Chickox

Great work y'all! Very upsetting stuff

Kwerp

Particularly this episode but overall this whole series has been great and made me very angry and depressed. I hope you decide to continue it with a season 2! Like Julian I had to shout quite a bit during this one :)

Mac-something

Best episode of the mini series (so far!)

skiplogic

last week tonight for grownups

Jay Miller

Julian's comments couldn't be any sharper or more on point. My favorite part of my new favorite podcast. You guys continue to amaze!

mysticwerebadger

So I work with a big bank, processing levies for unpaid debts, usually by court order. And lemme say, these lenders make up the bulk of our work in almost every state. 80% of those are run through a single law firm, Western Legal/LVNV Funding. It's gross, and the valve is always wide open, it's just endless.

Goblet

Wow I had no idea how destructive this idea could be. You may remember that this idea even wormed itself into the film Yes Man. Jim Carey's character is forced to say 'yes' to everyone's micro-loans and "everybody wins."

Anonymous

At first, I thought this was about payday loans in the Midwest. I think that would be a great future episode. Payday loans were a never-ending cycle until laws were enacted to protect those who were caught in the trap.

Neechay

Julian, It's not the ever rising rate of profit, it's falling, i could hear the hesitancy in your voice before you said the wrong thing, marx's ghost is ashamed of you and so am i