The Silicon Valley Microfinance Network

The Bay Area’s premier microfinance education and networking organization

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December 6th Meeting Recap – Panel: Is Microfinance Dying?

Posted by hilarywilson on December 12, 2011

SVMN Panel: Is Microfinance Dying?

Featuring: Dr. Ruth Shapiro, Maya Chorengel, Sean Foote, Dr. Lamia Karim

Tuesday, December 6th 2011

Panel Recap Written by SVMN Volunteer Elayna Yussen

SVMN packed the house last Tuesday evening with a diverse speaker panel including Maya Chorengel of Elevar Equity, Sean Foote of Labrador Ventures and faculty at UC Berkeley Haas School of Business, and Dr. Lamia Karim, Author, Anthropologist and Associate Director of Center for the Study of Women and Society at University of Oregon.  Dr. Ruth Shapiro moderated the panel.  While collectively, we may not have reached conclusive agreement regarding the assertion that Microfinance is dying, we did hear a wide range of interesting analogies to the Microfinance Industry – from the recent housing crisis to the French Revolution.

Following opening statements the moderator asked the panel for their thoughts on privatization within the industry.  Dr. Karim was skeptical of the benefits and stressed how careful we must be when working with very poor people.  This topic was close to home for Maya, whose firm was an early investor in SKS Finance.  She noted the benefits of transparency, getting professionals involved in organizational governance, and improving access to capital.  At the same time, she said privatization provides incentive to scale and realize profits to attract investors.  This, then, can create temptation for lenders to become unscrupulous, especially if industry regulation is lacking.  Sean agreed that not all lenders are ethical, but felt that the influx of capital to the market was overall, a positive.

Idealism is directly proportional to your distance from the problem.  – Sean Foote on the concept of Microfinance

“Most microfinance borrowers don’t need a business plan to get a loan – is this a fundamental problem?” Dr. Shapiro challenged the panel.  This question sparked interesting debate, noting that leading uses of microfinance loan funds include cash flow / smoothing, covering old debt, and health care.  Are these things not important for poor people too?  After all, lenders in the developed world offer many loans that do not dictate how the funds must be spent.  Sean conceded that the industry “oversold” their story of how microfinance loans primarily fund or expand small businesses for poor entrepreneurs in the developing world, but recognized the vast opportunity to make a difference with a multitude of products for this market.  Of key importance is to develop success measurement tools that accurately reflect improvements to borrowers lives, not just profit of the lender.

The panel concluded with industry best practices including: self-regulation, leveraging networks of people that have been brought together for microfinance loans to address other social or environmental challenges, MFIs holding themselves accountable to the standards of the banking industry.  Though the microfinance industry has grown and has recently come under fire for questionable lending practices, Sean reminded us that “Idealism is directly proportional to your distance from the problem.”

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June 8th Meeting: Economic Empowerment for Women in Liberia

Posted by hilarywilson on June 3, 2011

Economic Empowerment for Women in Liberia

Featuring Chid Liberty of Made In: Liberia

-June 8th, 2011-

The next Silicon Valley Microfinance Network (SVMN) meeting will take place on Wednesday June 8th, 2011 and will feature Chid Liberty (Co-Founder of Liberty & Justice and Founder of Made In: Liberia) as he discusses his thriving, multi-national social enterprises.  Together, Liberty & Justice and Made In: Liberia provides the platform and tools necessary for enterprising women in Liberia to shift from unproductive trades in the informal economy to formal employment in productive small to medium enterprises (SMEs).

Join us as Chid discusses how his organization is revolutionizing the fair trade industry while providing economic opportunity for women in post-conflict Liberia.

Chid Liberty

“We give the Gaps and Levis and Pranas of the world an easy way to buy sustainably sourced African cotton.” -Chid Liberty

When: Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

6:00pm – 6:30pm – Drinks, appetizers, networking
6:30pm – 7:15pm – Intros & Speaker presentation
7:15pm – 7:30pm – Q & A
7:30pm – 8:00pm – Networking

Cost:

in advance: $20 regular attendee | $10 students,  non-profits (w/ ID)
at the door: $30 regular attendee | $20 students & non-profits (w/ ID)
(includes dinner + drinks)

Where: Swedish American Hall (Upstairs) – 2174 Market Street , San Francisco, CA 94114

To register, please click on the SVMN registration link here (Order now – seating is limited!):

Speaker Bio

Chid Liberty

Before co-founding Liberty & Justice Chid worked in finance and information systems for several high growth technology companies including Metavante Corporation (now Fidelity National Information Services), Mindjet, and Trilogy Integrated Resources. A Liberian native, Chid left Africa as an eighteen month old baby when his father became the Liberia’s Ambassador to Germany with residence in Bonn. Chid’s family later fled to the United States to escape Liberia’s deteriorating political situation.

In addition to his work at Liberty & Justice, Chid lectures extensively on social entrepreneurship and innovation, most recently at Princeton University, Tennessee State, and the University of Liberia where he serves as Entrepreneur in Residence at the Monrovia Business Startup Center, a program funded by SPARK, a Dutch NGO, and other European partners. He sits on TransFair USA’s Fair Trade Certified Apparel Multistakeholder Group where he helps to guide Fair Trade Certified apparel policy for the United States. Chid was also awarded the Cordes Fellowship in 2010 and sits on the 2011 Cordes Fellowship Selection Committee where he helps give emerging social entrepreneurs a chance to attend the Opportunity Collaboration, a four-day problem-solving, strategic retreat for change-makers engaged in poverty alleviation and economic justice enterprises.

About Made In: Liberia

Made In: Liberia (MIL) is a US based non-profit organization, that supports capacity building programs in Liberia, West Africa. MIL exists to empower Liberian women by providing them with the training and skills necessary to participate in the global economic market while promoting sustainable development and increasing access to education and healthcare.


MIL’s mission is to provide the platform and the tools necessary for women in Liberia to transfer from unproductive trades in the informal economy to formal employment in productive Small and Medium Sized Enterprises making sustainable products and services for domestic markets.

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June 22nd SVMN Meeting: A Conversation with Author Jonathan Morduch

Posted by hilarywilson on June 4, 2010

A Conversation with Jonathan Morduch, Author of Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day

This Silicon Valley Microfinance Network (SVMN) meeting will take place on Tuesday, June 22, 2010 and will feature Jonathan Morduch, Professor of Public Policy and Economics at the NYU Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, Managing Director of the Financial Access Initiative, and author of Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day.

Purchase Portfolios of the Poor in advance.

Published in 2009, Portfolios of the Poor is the culmination of a research project that spans ten years and three countries, and examines the cash flow of almost 300 households among the poorest of the world. The result is a humanizing insight into the economic lives of the global poor, and a valuable resource for attempting to improve those lives. Jonathan Morduch’s book is one of the most highly regarded texts on economic development in the microfinance sector and is used as a textbook in university classes across the nation.

SVMN is proud to present this unique opportunity to hear Jonathan Morduch discuss his book and answer our questions. We look forward to seeing you there!

To register, please click on the SVMN registration link here (Order now – seating is limited!):

When: Tuesday, June 22, 2010

6:00-6:30 — Sign-in, dinner, networking
6:30-7:15 — Intros and speaker presentation
7:15-8:00 — Q&A
8:00-8:30 — Networking

Where: Omidyar Network Office

1991 Broadway St, Suite 200
Redwood City, CA 94063

(directions here)

Cost:

in advance: $20 regular attendee | $10 students,  non-profits (w/ ID)
at the door: $30 regular attendee | $20 students & non-profits (w/ ID)
(includes dinner + drinks)

This event is held in partnership with Omidyar Network, a philanthropic investment firm that creates opportunity for people to improve their lives. Established in 2004 by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar and his wife Pam, the organization has committed more than $330 million to for-profit companies and nonprofit organizations that foster economic advancement and encourage individual participation across multiple investment areas, including microfinance, property rights, and government transparency. To learn more about Omidyar Network, visit www.omidyar.com.

Speaker Bio

Jonathan Morduch
Jonathan Morduch is Professor of Public Policy and Economics at the NYU Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, and Managing Director of the Financial Access Initiative (www.financialaccess.org), a consortium of researchers focused on financial inclusion. His research centers on microfinance, social investment, and the economics of poverty. He is currently developing a theoretical framework with Jonathan Conning for understanding how governments and philanthropists can use market forces to create social change.

Morduch is co-author of Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day (Princeton 2009) and The Economics of Microfinance (MIT Press 2005, 2nd edition 2010). He has taught on the Economics faculty at Harvard University, and has held visiting positions at Stanford, Princeton, and the University of Tokyo. Morduch has worked with the United Nations and World Bank, and advises global NGOs. He is Associate Editor of the Journal of Economic Perspectives and on the board of the Journal of Globalization and Development.

Morduch holds a BA from Brown and Ph.D. from Harvard, both in Economics. He was awarded an honorary doctorate from the Université Libre de Bruxelles in December 2008 in recognition of his work on microfinance.

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December 8th SVMN Meeting: Microfinance in Failed States

Posted by hilarywilson on November 30, 2009

Microfinance in Post-Conflict Areas & Failed States

The next Silicon Valley Microfinance Network (SVMN) meeting will be on Tuesday, December 8, 2009 and will feature Karen Doyle Grossman, Vice President, Social Innovations at Mercy Corps and Stephen Tomlin, Vice President, Program Policy & Planning at International Medical Corps.

Karen Doyle Grossman Stephen Tomlin

SVMN’s next Speaker Event will address what microfinance looks like in the most capricious and fragile economic and political regions around the world.

During this meeting we will take a closer look at how economic development tools are provided to individuals in regions where conventional public and private aid sources are scarce.  How do microfinance institutions respond to the needs of clients in these tumultuous settings?  What are the adapted design features that allow organizations to be successful in these unstable climates? And ultimately, is microfinance a tool that will help rebuild these recovering, war-torn states?

Karen Doyle Grossman and Stephen Tomlin bring their extensive, practical experiences in microfinance to answer these questions and others.

Register early!  Online registration closes the day of the event.  At-the-door admission is $10 more.

To register, please click on the SVMN registration link here:

When:

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

6:00-6:30 — Sign-in, dinner, networking

6:30-7:15 — Intros & Speaker Presentations

7:15-8:00 —Q&A

8:00-8:30 — Networking

Where:

Salesforce Offices

600 Concar Dr.

San Mateo, CA 94402

(directions here)

Cost:

in advance: $20 regular attendee | $10 students & non-profits (w/ ID)
at the door: $30 regular attendee | $20 students & non-profits (w/ ID)
(includes dinner + drinks)

Speaker Bio


Karen Doyle Grossman

Karen Doyle Grossman is Vice President, Social Innovations at Mercy Corps.  In this role, Karen is designing and leading Mercy Corps’ work to advance highly-scalable, double bottom line solutions, particularly in fragile and failing states.  By leveraging the agency’s focus on community-led, market-driven programming and 3,700 staff in over 35 countries, the Social Innovations team helps Mercy Corps to assemble the systems and partnerships needed to sustain and scale its most promising community-driven innovations.  Previously, in the mid to late 1990’s, Karen launched Mercy Corps’ global economic development strategy specializing in transitional and conflict-affected environments.

Karen formerly worked as a program director at the Aspen Institute, where she launched the Institute’s Young Leadership Initiative for executives under the age of 45.  She also managed the Socrates Society, a Silicon Valley-based seminar and policy program for private sector and social entrepreneurs.  Karen was an associate director for the Institute’s Economic Opportunities Program, leading multi-year initiatives to document, evaluate and fund innovative anti-poverty strategies.  Karen has published extensively on social value creation and enterprise development, including Connectors and Conduits: Reaching Competitive Markets from the Ground Up, Business First: Using Technology to Advance Microenterprise Development and the first major study of microfinance in conflict zones, Microfinance in the Wake of Conflict: Challenges and Opportunities for the U.S. Agency for International Development.

Karen holds a B.A. in Government from the University of Virginia and a Master’s Degree in Education Policy Studies at The George Washington University, and has completed additional education at Harvard, Stanford and the Institute of the Himalayan Tradition.  Karen lives in Virginia with her husband, Brian, and their three children.  She is passionate about yoga philosophy and meditation, issues related to autism and environmental health for children, and travel.

Stephen Tomlin

As Vice President for Program Policy & Planning for International Medical Corps, Stephen has helped mobilize and direct International Medical Corps’ response to crises, including those in Kosovo, East Timor, Iraq, Darfur, Lebanon and the tsunami-affected areas of Indonesia and Sri Lanka. After the fall of Taliban regime in late 2001, he spent six months in Afghanistan, personally supervising the build-up of International Medical Corps programs there to expand health care training programs and to assist communities hit by severe drought. During the run-up to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in early 2003, he coordinated a training program that helped relief workers prepare to face the dangers of potential chemical, biological and nuclear attacks. Drawing on first-hand experience of war, famine and disease, Tomlin has directed a wide range of programs for International Medical Corps, including the provision of trauma surgery in war zones, the establishment of large-scale therapeutic feeding programs, creating economic and livelihoods opportunities, and helping to control infectious disease epidemics in remote locations.

Born in Britain and educated at Oxford Brookes University, Tomlin first joined International Medical Corps in 1989, working in Central America to support populations displaced by conflicts in the region. From there, he was appointed to lead International Medical Corps’ emergency relief response to the civil war and subsequent famine in Somalia, 1991-92. The following year, Tomlin directed International Medical Corps’ medical relief and development program in Afghanistan.  Returning to East Africa in 1994 as Regional Director, based in Nairobi, he supervised International Medical Corps’ emergency relief operations in South Sudan, Rwanda, Burundi, and Somalia.

Tomlin has contributed to a wide range of NGO working groups, including those sponsored by the Washington, DC-based, Interaction, a coalition representing U.S. non-governmental organizations (NGO) focused on the world’s most vulnerable people. He was a member of the NGO Leaders’ Forum 1999-2004, and attended the Humanitarian Leadership Program at Harvard Business School in 2003.  Originally from London, Tomlin lived for fifteen years in Africa, South Asia and Latin America before relocating to California in 1995.  He is married with four children and currently resides in Santa Monica, CA.

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Global Microfinance Investment Congress: May 14-16 in NY

Posted by Dave McClure on November 5, 2007

Global Microfinance Investment Congress

PlaNet Finance & ACI are hosting a microfinance investment conference in New York next May 14-16. More information is available at the Global Microfinance Investment Congress website.

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