Thursday, January 6, 2011
Little isn't always better
A recent article in the NYT discussing the tarnishing of the "halo" around microlending in developing countries could almost be any recent article decrying the dangers of the consumer debt explosion here in the U.S.:
Done right, these loans have shown promise in allowing some borrowers to build sustainable livelihoods. But it has also become clear that the rapid growth of microcredit — in India some lending firms were growing at 60 percent to 100 percent a year — has made the loans much less effective.
Most borrowers do not appear to be climbing out of poverty, and a sizable minority is getting trapped in a spiral of debt, according to studies and analysts.
“Credit is both the source of possibilities and it’s a bond,” said David Roodman, a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development, a research organization in Washington. “Credit is often operating at this knife’s edge, and that gets forgotten.”
Pope Benedict warned of this in Caritas in Veritate (para. 45), saying:
“Ethical financing” is being developed, especially through micro-credit and, more generally, micro-finance. These processes are praiseworthy and deserve much support. Their positive effects are also being felt in the less developed areas of the world. It would be advisable, however, to develop a sound criterion of discernment, since the adjective “ethical” can be abused. When the word is used generically, it can lend itself to any number of interpretations, even to the point where it includes decisions and choices contrary to justice and authentic human welfare.
(I comment on this in my article, Applying the Lessons of Caritas in Veritate to the Regulation of Consumer Credit....)
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2011/01/little-isnt-always-better.html