The Star Malaysia

Facebook-style microcredi­t site helps China farmers

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BEIJING: Dairy farmer Deligeerma needs US$642 (RM1,945) to buy fodder for her cows during the harsh winter months in northern China. So far, she has received us$149(rm451) in pledges from four people around the world.

The 37-year-old is one of hundreds of rural dwellers in impoverish­ed areas of China using a Facebook-style social networking site to borrow money from individual­s in China and overseas to fund their businesses.

Wokai – “I start” in Chinese – launched the microfinan­ce platform in 2008 and has so far distribute­d 5.5 million yuan (Rm2.63mil) to more than 900 people in Inner Mongolia in the north and Sichuan province in the southwest.

The US organisati­on works with two microcredi­t institutio­ns in China, where hundreds of such groups help farmers unable to get bank funding because the size of the loan is too small and they have no assets to offer as collateral.

“It’s really providing them an opportunit­y to get themselves out of poverty, enabling them to create a sustainabl­e living for themselves,” Wokai co-founder Casey Wilson said.

Wokai’s person-to-person microfinan­cing platform is unique in China where most micro-loans are funded by the government and institutio­ns such as the United Nations Developmen­t Program.

Its website features profiles of hundreds of borrowers who have

It’s really providing them an opportunit­y to get themselves out of poverty, enabling them to create a sustainabl­e living for themselves. — CASEY WILSON

been carefully screened by local loan officers. They are mostly farmers needing money to buy animal fodder and shopkeeper­s seeking help to restock shelves.

Individual­s around the world can browse the profiles and select who they want to support. Donors then receive regular updates on the borrowers via Wokai’s website.

After the loan is repaid the money is redistribu­ted to another borrower selected by the donor.

Over the next 10 years, Wokai aims to lift 100,000 people out of poverty and expand its model across the central and western regions of China where millions of poor people live.

“With 200 million people still living on less than US$1.25 (RM3.78) a day there’s a huge amount of developmen­t that still needs to be done,” said Wilson.

“China needs a sustainabl­e model of developmen­t that isn’t just a handout but a handout where the dollar can be multiplied and leveraged.” The growing wealth divide between rural and urban residents in China is a major concern for leaders anxious to maintain social stability, especially in the run-up to a major power transition that begins this year.

At the annual parliament­ary meeting in Beijing this month, Premier Wen Jiabao vowed to reverse “the trend of a widening income gap” by increasing investment in social security, education and higher wages.

But Du Xiaoshan, an expert on microfinan­cing in China, believes micro-credit could play a bigger role in helping the millions of people in China who have largely missed out on the benefits of 30-years of rapid economic growth.

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