Microfinance was meant to help the world’s poor, but in Cambodia, it’s plunging people deeper into debt
by Hanna Hett from The World: Latest Stories on (#6FPVC)
Microfinance was hailed as a way to change the lives of hundreds of millions of people without access to credit. It worked so well that Grameen Bank founder Muhammad Yunus was awarded a Nobel Prize. But then, banks jumped in to get in on the profits. To manage high debt levels, Cambodians are migrating for work, eating less and even pulling their children out of school.