Learning with Impact Through Tobin’s Global Micro-Loan Program

November 12, 2008

The Peter J. Tobin College of Business is introducing a novel, student-run Global Micro-Loan Program that actively engages students in international finance while fulfilling St. John’s Catholic and Vincentian mission of helping the poor and the marginalized.
 
The Program marks “the next stage in business education on the global level,” says Linda Sama, Ph.D. Dr. Sama spearheaded the initiative, which is scheduled to debut in Spring 2009 with the introduction of a three-credit elective called Entrepreneurship.

Delivering her remarks at the October 14, 2008, Provost’s Dialogues of the Future Lecture on “Bankers to the Poor,” Dr. Sama unveiled the Program’s salient components. She cited its dual goals: exploring the utility of micro credit as a tool for combating poverty in locales where banks are virtually non-existent, “while exposing our students to the challenges of lending and collecting money in the developing world.”

Micro Finance — lending small amounts of money to businesspeople who do not have the necessary collateral required by traditional financial institutions — has been increasingly embraced by entrepreneurs in marginalized geographic areas, in particular, by women entrepreneurs. Loan candidates are carefully vetted and repayment trends vary from six months to a year, with typically low default rates tending to be low running at 3-4 percent.   

Entrepreneurship Elective
Starting this spring and every semester thereafter, qualified juniors and seniors in the Tobin College are invited to apply for admission to the Entrepreneurship elective, enabling them to participate in the Global Micro-Loan Program. As part of this initiative they will be involved in the process of helping to provide business loans to small entrepreneurs in distressed countries.

Relying heavily on the Web, the course deftly combines St. John’s award winning IT capabilities with student talents in marketing and financial assessment. The Daughters of Charity, as Program Field Partners, supply the necessary distribution and collection of funds worldwide.

Division of Labor
The Program blueprint centers on a division of labor between participating students and Daughters of Charity and is designed to achieve effectiveness and minimize administrative and start-up fees.

With an established presence in 72 developing countries and familiarity with their local communities, the Daughters of Charity approve initial applications. They then communicate with and distribute funds to approved candidates and subsequently collect loan repayments. Since the Program is Web-based, donors can submit funds to fulfill loan requests in denominations of $50 to $1,000 from anywhere in the world where there is Internet access.

Donated monies are routed to a special St. John’s restricted fund to be wired to vetted applicants. “As monies are repaid they flow back into this fund generating a growing source of capital for larger numbers of candidates,” Dr. Sama explains. The loans are provided effectively interest free thus eliminating many of the concerns rising from high interest rates attached to such loans.

Program students assist IT in designing and maintaining the Program Website including providing links for donor contributions. They monitor loan repayment and fees, develop marketing strategies and assist in lending risk and business plans. “As the Program gains momentum,” Dr. Sama notes, “ the students will assume more activist roles such as providing outreach to potential donors and helping to identify lending candidates. An anticipated Student Fellows Program will permit students to meet with entrepreneurs who are recipients of the Program’s loans to be assessed first-hand to measure the Program’s effectiveness.  

An Opportunity, Not a Panacea
“We are starting with just a few countries— Ethiopia, Bolivia, Nigeria and Northern India have been recommended as countries where technology is available, English is spoken and the Daughters of Charity have a presence. Ultimately other countries will be included and the potential for community-based loans may also be explored since micro-finance is just one possible poverty eradication tool, “ says Dr. Sama. “

The Provost’s Dialogues on the Future is a lecture series on topics that impact the global community and the future designed to encourage a University-wide exchange of ideas for effecting change.

This year, the University Community is reading Banker to the Poor by Muhammad Yunnus as the starting point for discussing the issue of how micro-finance can help eliminate global poverty and empower communities. The theme will also be examined within the context of the challenges presented by seeking to meet the United Nations’ first Millennium Development Goal of eliminating world poverty and hunger by 2015.

For more information contact Dr. Linda Sama, Associate Dean for Global Initiatives Management at (718) 990-7323 or by email at samal@stjohns.edu