URBim | for just and inclusive cities

Carlin Carr, Bangalore Community Manager

The poor live in precarious circumstances on a daily basis. Unexpected illnesses or job losses that would put a strain on any family often leave the poor on the brink. With no access to the formal banking system, microloans have not only served to help in emergency situations, but have actually helped these families to build up savings and gain access to important, life-saving products. The loans, mainly to women, have expanded in purpose and scope since Grameen launched its rural banking system in the 1990s. Today, microfinance institutions such as Samasta in Bangalore have used the women’s groups that form the basis of lending to focus loans on other important intervention areas, including insurance, home gas connections, and water purifiers.

Samasta started in Bangalore in 2008 and in just the first two years reached nearly 77,000 clients with a 99.97 percent repayment rate. Originally focusing on India’s southern states, the institution’s goal is to expand north and reach 1.8 million people by the end of this year. The bank’s focus is to “bridge the gap between ambition and achievement for the working poor across India, by providing financial and non-financial services in a sustainable, long-term relationship to enable them to achieve a better quality of life.” Samasta has had to expand its range of products in order to keep its clients as long-term customers.

Some of the new products Samasta has added include:

  • Micro Health Insurance: The United Samasta Micro Health Insurance policy protects members and their families from burdensome costs due to unexpected medical emergencies.
  • LPG (Liquid Petroleum Gas) Loan: The LPG loan helps clients to move away from collecting firewood or accessing kerosene, both of which are highly polluting and dangerous to their health.
  • Water Purifier Loan: Not only can lack of access to safe drinking water be dangerous, the ongoing health impacts due to water-borne illnesses can take a large financial toll on families. This loan helps families access new safe-water technologies and products for their home.

One client — 49-year-old Victoria, a grandmother — was selling fruit on the roadside. Her first micro loan with Samasta helped her to set up a fruit stall at the market, thereby increasing her income. Once she repaid her first loan, Victoria took out a second loan to invest in her granddaughter’s education. Samasta’s loans have empowered women such as Victoria to take control of her family’s health and well-being in a variety of ways, from education to household improvements to healthcare.

No longer subject to rogue moneylenders, Victoria and thousands of others are taking incremental steps to improve their daily lives and expand opportunities for their own families as well as for the next generation. The growing importance of MFIs in the lives of the poor has moved the institutional role from one of expanding income opportunities to expanding opportunities to improve the overall quality of life. This is the new MFI in India.

Photo credit: McKay Savage