Muhammad Yunus
Author of Banker to the Poor: Micro-Lending and the Battle Against World Poverty
About the Author
Muhammad Yunus, a native of Bangladesh, is the founder of Grameen Bank and the father of microcredit, an economic movement that has helped lift millions of families around the world out of poverty. Yunus and Grameen Bank are winners of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize, and Yunus won the Presidential show more Medal of Freedom in 2009 and the Congressional Gold Medal in 2013. show less
Image credit: Muhammad Yunus in the Forbes Media Centennial Celebration at Pier 60 on September 19, 2017 in New York City
Works by Muhammad Yunus
Banker to the Poor: Micro-Lending and the Battle Against World Poverty (1999) 1,390 copies, 36 reviews
Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future of Capitalism (2007) 642 copies, 8 reviews
Building Social Business: The New Kind of Capitalism That Serves Humanity's Most Pressing Needs (2010) 197 copies, 1 review
A World of Three Zeros: The New Economics of Zero Poverty, Zero Unemployment, and Zero Net Carbon Emissions (2017) 117 copies, 2 reviews
Reflections on China 2 copies
Thế giới ba Không 1 copy
Bikhray moti 1 copy
Awakened China shakes the world and is now Pakistan's mainstay : memories of a diplomat (2015) 1 copy
Il banchiere dei popoli 1 copy
Associated Works
Food Inc.: A Participant Guide: How Industrial Food is Making Us Sicker, Fatter, and Poorer-And What You Can Do About It (2009) — Contributor — 539 copies, 3 reviews
Shared Values for a Troubled World: Conversations with Men and Women of Conscience (1994) — Contributor — 28 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1940-06-28
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Dhaka University
Vanderbilt University - Organizations
- Grameen Bank
- Awards and honors
- Nobel Prize (Peace, 2006)
Presidential Medal of Freedom (2009) - Nationality
- Bangladesh
- Map Location
- Bangladesh
Members
Reviews
"Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach him to fish and you feed him for a lifetime." Until I read this book I did not see the absolute and immense arrogance and bias in this statement. Bias: If a poor person knows how to fish, but doesn't, it's because he is lazy. If he is not lazy, clearly he does not know how to fish or he would. Arrogance: Give and you feed him, teach him and, again you feed him. He gets no credit.
The goal of the Grameen Bank, the primary subject of this show more book would have said it differently. Give a person, usually a woman, a fish, and you feed her for a day. Remove the obstacles that prevent her from fishing and the opportunity for her to feed herself and her family result. "YOU", as the primary part of the result, disappears.
For our supposed fisherman, let us suppose he does know how to fish, would like to fish, but where he lives you cannot fish from the bank. You need a boat. But our fisherman's wife was sick and needed medicine and to buy it, the fisherman had to sell his boat. A poor man since his wife's illness, he cannot buy the materials to make another boat. What good is "teaching him to fish"? No bank will loan him the money to build the boat, he has no collateral.
But there is one bank that will loan him the $100 to buy the boat building materials. This bank knows the poor work hard, they want to succeed and they know, if they blow this chance, that is the end of the road for them. They can't NOT pay back that loan. Every week he pays the bank $2.00. At the end of a year, the loan is paid. Used to paying the $2.00 a week, now he puts that money in the bank as savings. He has started on a road to pull him and his family out of the bonds of poverty
Grameen Bank was a new concept and Muhammad Yunus, who defined how it would work received the Nobel Prize for Economics. Through his efforts, the Bank and those set up in a similar pattern have helped hundreds of thousands of individuals escape poverty by setting up small businesses of their own. He has proved the poor have the capacity to escape poverty when they are empowered to pull themselves out. They have pulled themselves above the poverty line. They have seen to it their children have gotten an education, many of the children of illiterate parents have gone to college through the successes made possible by micro-loans. Successes possible through basic capitalism, not government hand-outs..
Repayment? The banks providing micro-loans to the poor have a 98% repayment rate. These people do not default. They cannot afford to. Grameen came to being in Bangladesh but was exported to many other countries, and not only developing countries. The barriers they had to overcome were myriad. Their success is incredible. It's effect is so significant it may be pointing a way to truly help make poverty a thing of the past. show less
The goal of the Grameen Bank, the primary subject of this show more book would have said it differently. Give a person, usually a woman, a fish, and you feed her for a day. Remove the obstacles that prevent her from fishing and the opportunity for her to feed herself and her family result. "YOU", as the primary part of the result, disappears.
For our supposed fisherman, let us suppose he does know how to fish, would like to fish, but where he lives you cannot fish from the bank. You need a boat. But our fisherman's wife was sick and needed medicine and to buy it, the fisherman had to sell his boat. A poor man since his wife's illness, he cannot buy the materials to make another boat. What good is "teaching him to fish"? No bank will loan him the money to build the boat, he has no collateral.
But there is one bank that will loan him the $100 to buy the boat building materials. This bank knows the poor work hard, they want to succeed and they know, if they blow this chance, that is the end of the road for them. They can't NOT pay back that loan. Every week he pays the bank $2.00. At the end of a year, the loan is paid. Used to paying the $2.00 a week, now he puts that money in the bank as savings. He has started on a road to pull him and his family out of the bonds of poverty
Grameen Bank was a new concept and Muhammad Yunus, who defined how it would work received the Nobel Prize for Economics. Through his efforts, the Bank and those set up in a similar pattern have helped hundreds of thousands of individuals escape poverty by setting up small businesses of their own. He has proved the poor have the capacity to escape poverty when they are empowered to pull themselves out. They have pulled themselves above the poverty line. They have seen to it their children have gotten an education, many of the children of illiterate parents have gone to college through the successes made possible by micro-loans. Successes possible through basic capitalism, not government hand-outs..
Repayment? The banks providing micro-loans to the poor have a 98% repayment rate. These people do not default. They cannot afford to. Grameen came to being in Bangladesh but was exported to many other countries, and not only developing countries. The barriers they had to overcome were myriad. Their success is incredible. It's effect is so significant it may be pointing a way to truly help make poverty a thing of the past. show less
I just finished reading "Banker to the Poor" by Muhammad Yunus, and WOW. This book is amazing, inspirational, and eye-opening. I hope everyone reads it.
From the book cover: “In 1983, Muhammad Yunus established Grameen, a bank devoted to providing the poorest of Bangladesh with miniscule loans. Twenty-three years later they won the Nobel Prize for Peace for their work in eradicating poverty. This is an inspiring story of one man’s realization that access to even a small amount of credit show more can transform the lives of the poorest citizens of the world.”
The key difference between Yunus’ approach and everyone else’s approach isn’t in the policies his bank uses (well, they are very important, but they came about as a result of this): he sees and treats poor people as people first, and as competent, trustworthy, talented people who are survivors. Over and over again he had to deflect opposition from people who believe poor people are lazy, they are too unskilled, they need training, they’ll never pay the money back, they’ll waste the money, and so on. But Yunus knew that the poorest people would realize the chance the micro-loan really was: a chance to save their life, and their children’s lives. Yunus has proven that people do not live in poverty because they are stupid or lazy, they live in poverty because they are trapped there by unfair systems (credit systems, governmental systems, charity). He says Grameen shows that credit is a human right, and “breaks the bondage of collateral.” He has a dream to end poverty worldwide (which Yunus describes as a world in which no one dies of hunger and every person can take care of his or her basic life needs). I think if enough people read this book and take action we will achieve his dream.
Grameen hasn’t stopped at banking…over time as they see the needs, they’ve created many businesses designed to give power and a chance to the poorest people: cell phone companies, fisheries, wholesale/middleman for hand-woven cloth, and others. Grameen has positive effects on the environment: reduced birthrates are a result of the micro-loans to the poorest of the poor and Grameen has been bringing solar power to the villages in Bangladesh to power cell phones through it’s “phone ladies.”
Micro-loans are a powerful tool for women’s liberation (95% of Grameen’s borrowers are women): women in Bangladesh, where Grameen was started, typically never even leave their homes, much less have jobs or interact with men outside of their families. But the women who get micro-loans go on to interact more with people outside their families, they gain their own independence by becoming financially able to care for themselves and their children. Birth rates even decrease after micro-loans! And it isn’t limited to a third-world country in Bangladesh. A few similar programs have been created here in the United States and this is a quote from the book by a woman in Chicago “I never expected that I would ever earn money. My husband never gives me any money to spend. We shop together. He pays. I never had money of my own. For the fifteen years I have lived in America, I have never even had a bank account. Now I have money and I have my own bank account. I have a checkbook. My husband does not know anything about it. I have not dared to tell him yet.” That woman had never really experienced true adulthood until her micro-loan.
These are real loans; each borrower is fully expected to pay back both principal and interest, even after a disaster like a cyclone. Grameen is a for-profit bank. And at the end of the day, the borrowers gain self-confidence, self-esteem, independence, and money—they gain a real life.
Amazing transformative change from a $25 or $600 loan! This is truly revolutionary. Please go to www. GrameenFoundation.org and see what they are doing. Read the book Banker to Poor: Micro-lending and battle against world poverty. Donate $100 (or more!) to the Grameen Foundation today. show less
From the book cover: “In 1983, Muhammad Yunus established Grameen, a bank devoted to providing the poorest of Bangladesh with miniscule loans. Twenty-three years later they won the Nobel Prize for Peace for their work in eradicating poverty. This is an inspiring story of one man’s realization that access to even a small amount of credit show more can transform the lives of the poorest citizens of the world.”
The key difference between Yunus’ approach and everyone else’s approach isn’t in the policies his bank uses (well, they are very important, but they came about as a result of this): he sees and treats poor people as people first, and as competent, trustworthy, talented people who are survivors. Over and over again he had to deflect opposition from people who believe poor people are lazy, they are too unskilled, they need training, they’ll never pay the money back, they’ll waste the money, and so on. But Yunus knew that the poorest people would realize the chance the micro-loan really was: a chance to save their life, and their children’s lives. Yunus has proven that people do not live in poverty because they are stupid or lazy, they live in poverty because they are trapped there by unfair systems (credit systems, governmental systems, charity). He says Grameen shows that credit is a human right, and “breaks the bondage of collateral.” He has a dream to end poverty worldwide (which Yunus describes as a world in which no one dies of hunger and every person can take care of his or her basic life needs). I think if enough people read this book and take action we will achieve his dream.
Grameen hasn’t stopped at banking…over time as they see the needs, they’ve created many businesses designed to give power and a chance to the poorest people: cell phone companies, fisheries, wholesale/middleman for hand-woven cloth, and others. Grameen has positive effects on the environment: reduced birthrates are a result of the micro-loans to the poorest of the poor and Grameen has been bringing solar power to the villages in Bangladesh to power cell phones through it’s “phone ladies.”
Micro-loans are a powerful tool for women’s liberation (95% of Grameen’s borrowers are women): women in Bangladesh, where Grameen was started, typically never even leave their homes, much less have jobs or interact with men outside of their families. But the women who get micro-loans go on to interact more with people outside their families, they gain their own independence by becoming financially able to care for themselves and their children. Birth rates even decrease after micro-loans! And it isn’t limited to a third-world country in Bangladesh. A few similar programs have been created here in the United States and this is a quote from the book by a woman in Chicago “I never expected that I would ever earn money. My husband never gives me any money to spend. We shop together. He pays. I never had money of my own. For the fifteen years I have lived in America, I have never even had a bank account. Now I have money and I have my own bank account. I have a checkbook. My husband does not know anything about it. I have not dared to tell him yet.” That woman had never really experienced true adulthood until her micro-loan.
These are real loans; each borrower is fully expected to pay back both principal and interest, even after a disaster like a cyclone. Grameen is a for-profit bank. And at the end of the day, the borrowers gain self-confidence, self-esteem, independence, and money—they gain a real life.
Amazing transformative change from a $25 or $600 loan! This is truly revolutionary. Please go to www. GrameenFoundation.org and see what they are doing. Read the book Banker to Poor: Micro-lending and battle against world poverty. Donate $100 (or more!) to the Grameen Foundation today. show less
Banker to the Poor is Muhammad Yunus's semi-autobiographical book about his role in creating the Grameen Bank, an organization that lends money to the poorest of the poor in an effort to improve their quality of life. It's easy to see in this book the passion Yunus has for creating a poverty-free world and the book chronicles both his sucesses and failures with this kind of grassroots approach to eliminating poverty by way of the Bank. It is a powerful statement of the potential for even the show more poorest of people to eliminate their own poverty when given the means to do so, and I would recommend this read to anybody who cares about and would do something about widespread poverty around the world. show less
Subtitled about micro-lending, I expected the book might be something of a dry economic treatice on banking. However, quite the contrary, the book was an engaging story of how Muhammad Yunus, an economic professor in Bangladesh in the 1970's, took small steps to improve the status of the poor villagers near his school. This eventually led to the forming of the Grameen Bank which has become a major source of poverty elimination and has loaned billions to the poor. The results are show more near-unbelievable, and resulted in his receipt of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize.
His efforts began with his effort to do more than lecture on economic theory and actually bring economic benefit to his country. His volunteers idenfied a local example of a village woman who scraped by in life making bamboo stools. But she needed to borrow money for supplies, and then had to pay back that money after her labor, leaving only pennies for herself and her children. The cycle continued on a daily basis. By lending her the money she needed for supplies out of his own pocket, she was able to keep the profits for herself, gradually earning enough to break free of the money-lender and raise her family from total poverty. Through this beginning, he found support to loan very small amounts of money to very poor people, enabling them to become self-employed instead of giving most of the money earned to the middlemen. He chose to deal with the very poorest in his native Bangladesh, and almost exclusively with women, who had the fewest opportunities for success in this society.
The Peace Prize he was awarded recognized that lasting peace can not be achieved unless large population groups find ways in which to break out of poverty. Micro-credit is one such means. Development from below also serves to advance democracy and human rights.
The book describes how micro-lending has succeeded from this small beginning, and benefited millions, not only in Bangladesh, but also in many countries around the world. He also was invited to the U.S. and intiated efforts during the Clinton years, although the initial efforts were not easy given the background of welfare and charity in this country. He shows the harmful side of a welfare mentality in this country, and how small financial backing to individuals can be a liberating force and bring economic benefit. He also shows how these efforts, while socially responsible and be profitable for banks as well. I found this to be a very enlightening book. show less
His efforts began with his effort to do more than lecture on economic theory and actually bring economic benefit to his country. His volunteers idenfied a local example of a village woman who scraped by in life making bamboo stools. But she needed to borrow money for supplies, and then had to pay back that money after her labor, leaving only pennies for herself and her children. The cycle continued on a daily basis. By lending her the money she needed for supplies out of his own pocket, she was able to keep the profits for herself, gradually earning enough to break free of the money-lender and raise her family from total poverty. Through this beginning, he found support to loan very small amounts of money to very poor people, enabling them to become self-employed instead of giving most of the money earned to the middlemen. He chose to deal with the very poorest in his native Bangladesh, and almost exclusively with women, who had the fewest opportunities for success in this society.
The Peace Prize he was awarded recognized that lasting peace can not be achieved unless large population groups find ways in which to break out of poverty. Micro-credit is one such means. Development from below also serves to advance democracy and human rights.
The book describes how micro-lending has succeeded from this small beginning, and benefited millions, not only in Bangladesh, but also in many countries around the world. He also was invited to the U.S. and intiated efforts during the Clinton years, although the initial efforts were not easy given the background of welfare and charity in this country. He shows the harmful side of a welfare mentality in this country, and how small financial backing to individuals can be a liberating force and bring economic benefit. He also shows how these efforts, while socially responsible and be profitable for banks as well. I found this to be a very enlightening book. show less
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 29
- Also by
- 4
- Members
- 2,384
- Popularity
- #10,767
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 48
- ISBNs
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