The inspirational story of how Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus
invented microcredit, founded the Grameen Bank, and transformed the
fortunes of millions of poor people around the world.
Muhammad Yunus was a professor of economics in Bangladesh, who realized
that the most impoverished members of his community were systematically
neglected by the banking system -- no one would loan them any money.
Yunus conceived of a new form of banking -- microcredit -- that would
offer very small loans to the poorest people without collateral, and
teach them how to manage and use their loans to create successful small
businesses. He founded Grameen Bank based on the belief that credit is a
basic human right, not the privilege of a fortunate few, and it now
provides $24 billion of micro-loans to more than nine million families.
Ninety-seven percent of its clients are women, and repayment rates are
over 90 percent. Outside of Bangladesh, micro-lending programs inspired
by Grameen have blossomed, and serve hundreds of millions of people
around the world.
The definitive history of micro-credit direct from the man that
conceived of it, Banker to the Poor is the moving story of someone who
dreamed of changing the world -- and did.