Case Study
Challenges of Scaling-up a Program for the Poorest: BRAC's IGVGD Program
Proceedings from "Scaling Up Poverty Reduction: A Global Learning Process and Conference", China
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18 pages
This paper describes the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee's (BRAC) Income Generation for Vulnerable Groups Development (IGVGD) program and examines reasons for its success.
The paper states that:
- IGVGD uses microfinance to build opportunity ladders for the poorest and lay long-term sustainable foundations for food security and livelihoods improvements;
- The IGVGD program builds on a government safety-net program that provides destitute women with free food-grain for an 18-month period;
- BRAC organizes these women into groups and provides basic savings, credit services, and skills training;
- As a result of participation in IGVGD:
- Women are operating microenterprises and earning incomes that enable them to stay above their previous levels of destitution;
- Women are graduating to regular microfinance programs that improve their economic conditions.
The paper states that the success of such a strategic linkage program between grant-based and market-based microfinance depends upon:
- Careful planning, and committed management;
- Constant learning and innovation;
- Negotiations with partners;
- A willingness to take on the challenges of developing markets to open up new opportunities for the very poor;
- Vision and commitment to include the poorest.
The paper concludes that:
- Carefully designed strategic linkages that include grants with a central role for microfinance can work for the poorest;
- The poorest have to be central to the vision and commitment of microfinance institutions in order to develop possibilities and opportunities to include them.
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