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Banker to the poor : the autobiography of Muhammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank

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Muhammad Yunus set up the Grameen Bank in his home country of Bangladesh with a loan of just [pound]17, to lend tiny amounts of money to the poorest of the poor - those to whom no ordinary bank would lend.

Most of his customers - as they still are - were illiterate women, wanting to set up the smallest imaginable village enterprises.

It was his conviction that this new system of 'micro-credit', lending even such small sums, would give such people the spark of initiative needed to pull themselves out of poverty.

Today, Yunus's system of micro-credit is practised around the world in some 60 countries, including the US, Canada and France.

His Grameen Bank is now a billion-pound business. It is acknowledged by world leaders and by the World Bank to be a fundamental weapon in the fight against poverty.

Banker to the Poor is Yunus's enthralling story of how he did it: how the terrible famine in Bangladesh in 1974 focused his ideas on the need to enable its victims to grow more food; how he overcame the sceptics in many governments and among traditional economic thinking; and how he saw his micro-credit extended even outside the Third World into credit unions in the West. Such is the importance of his book that HRH the Prince of Wales has contributed a Foreword in which he hails 'a remarkable man [who] spoke the greatest good sense'.

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Product Details
Aurum
1854109243 / 9781854109248
Paperback / softback
11/07/2003
United Kingdom
English
xviii, 313 p., [8] p. of plates : ill.
20 cm
general Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 1998.