We Are Not Able to Live in the Sky: The Seductive Promise of Microfinance
English
By (author): Mara Kardas-Nelson
In 2005, pop star Bono proclaimed, Give a man a fish, hell eat for a day. Give a woman microcredit, she, her husband, her children and her extended family will eat for a lifetime. By the mid-2000s, it had become international development dogma that microfinance - very small, high-interest loans - was the way to end poverty. The UN had dubbed 2005 the year of microcredit. A year later, when Muhammad Yunus won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work on microfinance, he proclaimed that tiny loans would put poverty in museums. It was a beautiful vision. But there was just one problem: microfinance doesnt work at least not as promised. Mara Kardas-Nelson's We Are Not Able to Live in the Sky is a story about unintended consequences, blind optimism, and the decades-long ramifications of seemingly small policy choices that reverberate around the world. It is a story of poor women doing their best to make ends meet under the toughest circumstances, and of international development workers, funders and advocates - from Bono to Bill Gates to Bill Clinton - who promise a brighter future with a quick-fix solution that may ultimately trap poor people in poverty. The book is deeply rooted in the deeply immersive narratives of women who take out microfinance loans in Sierra Leone; their stories are set against a detailed history of the meteoric rise of Muhammad Yunus lofty vision and the gradual shift from a small non-profit program to a booming for-profit industry. We Are Not Able to Live in the Sky puts in harsh relief the questions we all should have been asking for decades: who makes money off microfinance - and more importantly, who, and what, gets left behind?
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€30.59
Original price
€33.99
Will deliver when available. Publication date 08 Jul 2024