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Grameen Foundation and Global Partnerships Join Forces to Fight Poverty
New Alliance Increases Access to Financial Services for Latin America's Poor
Washington, D.C., June 13, 2006— Grameen Foundation and Global Partnerships, two leading
microfinance organizations, today announced a new alliance designed to expand financial
services to the poor in Latin America and the Caribbean. The alliance will give microfinance
institutions (MFIs) in the region an unprecedented level of access to funding from global capital
markets, as well as technical assistance, to help boost their outreach to the poor. Activities will
kick-off on June 19 with a three-day Latin American “road show” to brief MFI and bank
executives from four countries on the innovative financing opportunities offered by the alliance.
Headquartered in Washington, D.C., Grameen Foundation began working in Latin America in
1999, while Seattle-based Global Partnerships entered the region in 1994. Together, both
organizations support 18 MFIs in eight Latin American countries that serve 250,000 clients.
Over the past two years, they have worked together to prepare six MFIs for investment and high
growth by providing technical assistance with business plan development and strategic
planning, as well as performing due diligence evaluations.
This new alliance is targeting high potential “emerging” MFIs that are relatively small and that
serve neglected populations such as the rural poor, indigenous groups, and those living in
absolute poverty. These organizations typically have difficulty accessing capital markets
financing due to their limited outreach, regardless of the quality of their portfolios. “Few
networks have focused on developing capital market strategies for these emerging MFIs in Latin
America, despite the fact that microfinance outreach is only three million in a region home to
125 million people living on less than $2 a day, and 50 million barely surviving on less than $1
per day,” said Alex Counts, President and CEO of Grameen Foundation. “Philanthropists as
well as MFIs often note the insularity of U.S.-based non-profit organizations; this collaboration
represents a practical approach to realizing synergies between two like-minded organizations
that will allow MFIs to access multiple funding opportunities in both local and U.S. currency from
a single coordinated source.”
Microfinance institutions will receive increased funding in two key ways: direct, side-by-side
loans from Grameen Foundation and Global Partnerships, and facilitation of financing from local
banks. Global Partnerships will offer funding through its Microfinance Fund 2006, which offers
5-year term loans. Grameen Foundation’s Growth Guarantee program facilitates loans from
local banks to poverty-focused MFIs, thereby helping to integrate them into local financial
systems. MFIs also benefit from a single reporting requirement, since Global Partnerships will
monitor performance for both lenders. In addition, the MFIs will be able to access technical
assistance from the alliance to support their growth.
Although the microfinance industry is very active in many countries, most notably Bolivia and
Nicaragua, MFIs have met only about 15% of the demand for financial services by the poor in
Latin America. According to Gary Mulhair, Managing Partner of Global Partnerships, “This alliance leverages the resources and expertise of Grameen Foundation and Global Partnerships
in order to identify MFIs with potential for high growth. Together we can provide the full range of
support these MFIs need to scale operations and increase their impact on the poor.”
About Grameen Foundation
Grameen Foundation is a global non-profit organization that combines microfinance, technology
and innovation to empower the world's poorest people to escape poverty. Founded in 1997, it
has established a global network of 52 partners in 22 countries that has impacted an estimated
11 million lives in Asia, Africa, the Americas, and the Middle East.
The Foundation sprang from the Grameen Bank of Bangladesh. Grameen Bank was started in
1976 by an economics professor, Dr. Muhammad Yunus, who was convinced that women could
break through poverty by taking tiny loans to start or expand tiny businesses. Today, Grameen
Bank serves 6.1 million borrowers. As strategic global partners, Grameen Foundation and
Grameen Bank share a common vision, knowledge and success models to accelerate the
microfinance industry's impact on the world's poorest people. Dr. Yunus, the founder and
director of Grameen Bank, is a founding and current board member of the Grameen
Foundation. For more information, please visit www.grameenfoundation.org.
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