Paper
Microfinance Revolution: Lessons from Indonesia (Volume 2)
What can we learn from Indonesia's experience in microfinance?
516 pages
Microfinance Revolution examines Indonesia's experience in commercial microfinance - its stability, outreach, and profitability even during the recent severe crisis - and focuses on Bank Rakyat Indonesia's (BRI's) unit desa system, the world's largest sustainable microbanking system.
In particular, the structure of this book can be summarised as follows:
- Chapter 8 provides an introduction to Indonesia through mid-2001;
- Chapter 9 reviews the long history of this country in rural development and rural financial institutions and offers a clear background for understanding microfinance in Indonesia today;
- Chapter 10 describes Bank Dagang Bali, the oldest licensed general bank specialising in commercial microfinance currently operating in a developing country;
The development and growth of BRI's microbanking (unit desa) system from 1970-96 are considered in chapters 11-15;
- Chapter 11 examines the system as it developed into a massive, failed subsidised rural credit programme (1970-83);
- Chapters 12-14 explore the unit desas' transformation into a nationwide commercial microbanking system (1984-96), covering topics such as policy issues, lending, savings, and organisational reforms;
- Chapter 15 documents and analyses the extraordinary stability of the unit desas through 2001 - with some 20 million clients and more than 15 years of profitability - and other commercial microfinance organisations during Indonesia's recent crisis.
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