Weather Tonight: 5°c Partly Cloudy Night Morning: 9°c Cloudy

News

Faisel Rahman
Helping hand: Faisel Rahman, head of “micro-credit” firm Fair Finance

Loans to help poor become entrepreneurs

Abul Taher
24 Sep 2009


A loan system devised to aid some of the world's poorest people in Bangladesh is helping hard-up Londoners cope with the recession.

The scheme, known as micro-credit or micro-finance, works by lending small sums of money to high-risk or “non-creditworthy” customers which they pay back in instalments.

The idea was pioneered in the Seventies by Muhammad Yunus, 69, an economics professor in Bangladesh who gave poor villagers small loans to help them start businesses. He received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006.

More than 100 Londoners — some on jobseeker's allowance — have used loans from Fair Finance, a firm set up on a council estate in Stepney, to start businesses from market stalls to management consultancies.

Fair Finance's managing director, Faisel Rahman, 33, said the scheme had saved hundreds from being harassed by door-step lenders or being evicted from their homes.

“These customers are the ones who fall prey to door-step lenders who charge hundreds of per cent interest, go to pay-day lenders who do the same, or go to pawn shops and get loans by depositing their valuables,” he said.

The Office of Fair Trading estimates the door-step lending market is worth £2 billion, and in July the children's charity Barnardo's published a study which showed some were charging interest of up to 545 per cent APR.

Mr Rahman gave the example of a woman who approached him three months ago. “She had a loan from a door-step lender where the interest rate was 4,000 per cent. She took £200, but was paying £286 each month. So we took the loan off her and paid it off, and then she paid us back.”

The biggest Fair Finance personal loan is £2,000, but the average is £500. Interest is usually 35 per cent APR, and customers repay the money over a year with a £25 administration fee.

Mr Rahman said: “Although the interest does seem high, you have to appreciate the nearest rivals to us are door-step lenders who charge hundreds of per cent.”

Customers who pay early get interest rebates, and the firm has no fines for missed payments. It has a 94 per cent loan recovery rate, 80 per cent of which are paid on time.

Fair Finance's average business loan is £3,000, repayable over three years with interest of 12 to 19 per cent.

Mr Rahman says the company has lent to 1,600 people, and helped 150 start a small business. He said: “There is a lot of entrepreneurialism in people, even among the poorest. But banks would not lend money to them.”

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • MPs spend £400,000 of taxpayers' cash on 12 fig trees for their offices Fig Trees EXCLUSIVE: Taxpayers are footing a bill of almost £400,000 to rent 12 fig trees to shade MPs in the glass-roofed atrium of their...
  • 10 million Tube passengers fail to claim money back for delays Tube train More than 10 million Tube users are missing out on refunds worth more than £20 million when their trains are delayed
  • The final reckoning: how Boris and Ken measure up in election battle Ken Boris split London goes to the polls on May 3 with the election battle between Boris Johnson and Ken Livingstone set to be the capital's closest mayoral...
  • Commuters' favourite swaps busking for the big time with recording deal Tristan Mackay Busker Tristan Mackay has hit the jackpot after landing a record deal with an award-winning producer
  • What a smoothie! Eight-year-old Valentine gives Kate roses and a heart-shaped cupcake Kate Smoothie The Duchess of Cambridge's first Valentine's Day as a married woman was marked with roses, a card and a cupcake - but not from Prince...
  • Kercher family launch appeal over decision to clear Knox of murder Meredith Kercher Meredith Kercher's family today launched an appeal to overturn the decision to clear Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito of her murder
  • PM urged to deport Qatada as he hides in north London safe house Abu Qatada David Cameron was under pressure today to defy European judges by ordering the deportation of extremist cleric Abu Qatada as he holed up in...
  • Now jailed Dizaei could be forced to repay his £1million legal aid bill Ali Dizaei Met commander Ali Dizaei is facing the prospect of paying back tens of thousand of pounds of legal aid as Scotland Yard prepared to sack him...
  • Osborne defends his cuts strategy as inflation falls George Osborne Chancellor George Osborne defended his economic strategy as a fall in inflation finally brought mild relief to some from the tight squeeze...
  • Royal College students to receive scholarships courtesy of Burberry Rosie Huntington-Whitely At the luxury brand Burberry, Christopher Bailey has transformed a designer classic into must-have cool, as epitomised by the models Rosie...
  •  

    Don't Miss