'Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE)'
Doi
Abstract
International literature asserts that “micro-finance” began
alleviating poverty several decades ago when organisation in Latin
America, Bangladesh, and other developing nations started testing the
notions of lending small amounts to impoverished people (mostly women).
Professor Mohammad Younis1 of Bangladesh and his Grameen Bank brought it
on to the world stage and showed how effectively it could be used to
change lives. Giving loans of as little as five dollars, Grameen brought
millions in to the micro credit net and in doing so lifted people,
particularly the rural poor, out of abject poverty [Ayesha (2007)]. By
1980, the success of such institutions prompted many NGO’s and
International Organisations to provide micro-finance
services