Paper
Microequity and Microfinance
Can microequity finance be preferable to microcredit programmes?
13 pages
Microenterprise development is an effective means of assisting the poor in developing countries
This paper:
- Discusses the example of the Village Enterprise Fund, an NGO that makes small grants to entrepreneurs in Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania;
- Highlights that capital, given to the poor to start microenterprises, has almost exclusively been provided in the form of loans;
- Suggests that very few programmes have used equity financing through grants;
- Argues that microequity finance, in the form of small business startup grants, may in some cases be preferable to microcredit programmes;
The article concludes that:
- Microenterprises in developing countries need both grants and loans;
- The example of the Village Enterprise Fund in Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania demonstrates how a microequity institution has succeeded in reaching many of the rural poor.
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Published