BISWA: Fostering Inclusive Growth through Microfinance |
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"Poverty crushes the human spirit...Microfinance is a critical anti-poverty tool. When the poorest, especially women, receive credit, they become economic actors and are empowered. They are empowered to improve not only their own lives but, in a widening circle of impact, the lives of their families, their communities, and their nations. Microfinance can help make India's economic growth more inclusive" -Khirod Chandra Malick, Chairman, Bharat Integrated Social Welfare Agency.
He recalled how his decision to focus on microfinance to further BISWA's mission of social development had paid off handsomely. He said, Along the way, the organization had overcome various challenges. Initially operating as a social service organization that also provided micro credit to poor people, BISWA had since adopted an integrated approach to bring about a convergence between microfinance and micro enterprise development, micro marketing, micro insurance, and other social development initiatives. It also floated a Non Banking Financial Company (NBFC) to focus solely on microfinance. Till mid-2010, BISWA's microfinance program had directly touched the lives of 4,015,240 people. However, Malick realized that this was just the tip of the proverbial iceberg. His aim was to ramp up BISWA's presence to cover nearly all the states of India by the end of 2012. However, he knew that achieving that would not be easy as Microfinance Institutions (MFIs), particularly mid-sized and NGO2 -MFIs such as BISWA, had to face several challenges, and this despite the fact that the microfinance sector in India was showing positive trends. According to Malick,
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1] Odisha was earlier known as Orissa. It was one of the poorest states in India with 43% people of the state living below the poverty line with a per capita of less than US$1 per day.
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