Muhammad Yunus
Wednesday, January 16, 2008 @ 8:00 PM,
Arlington Theatre 1317 State Street, Santa Barbara,
CA 93101
Creating a World Without Poverty – Social Business and the Future of
Capitalism
“I only wish every nation shared Dr. Yunus’s and the Grameen Bank’s
appreciation of the vital role that… women play in the economic, social,
and political life of our societies.” – Hillary Rodham Clinton
Revolutionary economist Muhammad Yunus’s new book Creating a World
Without Poverty outlines his vision for an original business model
that combines the power of free markets with the quest for a more humane
world – and tells the inspiring stories of companies that are doing this
work today. Yunus is the founder of Grameen Bank, a pioneer of
microcredit – an economic movement that has helped lift millions of
families around the word out of poverty – and the author of Banker to
the Poor: Micro-lending and the Battle Against World Poverty.
Books will be available for purchase and signing.
General public $8.00 / UCSB Students $5.00
Generously supported by an anonymous donor.
Presented as part of the “Alleviating Global Poverty Event
Series.”
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_Yunus
Muhammad Yunus
(Bengali
: , pronounced Muhammôd Iunus) (born
June 28,
1940) is a
Bangladeshi
banker and
economist. He
previously was a
professor of
economics and
is famous for his successful application of
microcredit;
the extension of small
loans. These loans
are given to
entrepreneurs too poor to qualify for traditional
bank loans. Yunus
is also the founder of
Grameen
Bank. In 2006, Yunus and the bank were jointly awarded the
Nobel
Peace Prize, "for their efforts to create economic and social
development from below."[1]
Yunus himself has received several other national and international
honors. He is the author of
Banker
to the Poor and a founding board member of
Grameen
Foundation. In early 2007 Yunus showed interest in launching a
political party in Bangladesh named Nagorik Shakti (Citizen Power), but
later discarded the plan. He is one of the founding members of
Global
Elders.
Contents
[hide]
[
edit] Early years
The eldest of nine children, Yunus was born
in June 28,
1940 to a
Muslim family in
the village of Bathua, by the Boxirhat Road in
Hathazari,
Chittagong, then in
British
India (now in
Bangladesh).[2]
[3] His father was Hazi Dula Mia Shoudagar, a jeweler, and his
mother was Sofia Khatun. His early childhood years were spent in the
village. In 1944, his family moved to the city of
Chittagong,
and he was shifted to Lamabazar Primary School from his village
school.[2]
[4] By 1949, his mother was afflicted with psychological
illness.[3] Later, he passed the
matriculation examination from
Chittagong Collegiate School securing the 16th position among 39,000
students in
East
Pakistan.[4] During
his school years, he was an active
Boy Scout, and
traveled to West Pakistan and India in 1952, and to
Canada in 1955 to
attend
Jamborees
.[4] Later when Yunus was
studying at
Chittagong College, he became active in cultural activities and won
awards for drama
acting.[4] In 1957, he
enrolled in the department of
economics at
Dhaka
University and completed his
BA in
1960 and
MA in 1961.
Following his graduation, Yunus joined the Bureau of Economics as a
research assistant to the economical researches of
Professor Nurul Islam and
Rehman
Sobhan.[4] Later he
was appointed as a lecturer in economics in
Chittagong College in
1961.[4] During that time
he also set up a profitable
packaging factory on the
side.[3] He was offered a
Fulbright scholarship in 1965 to study in the
United
States. He obtained his
Ph.D. in economics
from
Vanderbilt University in the
United
States through the graduate program in Economic Development in
1969.[5] From 1969 to 1972, Yunus
was an assistant professor of economics at
Middle Tennessee State University in
Murfreesboro
, TN.
During the
Liberation War of Bangladesh in 1971, Yunus founded a citizen's
committee and ran the Bangladesh Information Center, with other
Bangladeshis living in the
United
States, to raise support for
liberation.[4]. He also
published the Bangladesh Newsletter from his home in
Nashville.
After the War, Yunus returned to Bangladesh and was appointed to the
government's Planning Commission headed by
Nurul Islam.
He found the job boring and resigned to join
Chittagong University as head of the Economics
department.[6] He became involved
with
poverty
reduction after observing the
famine of 1974, and established a rural economic program as a
research project. In 1975, he developed a Nabajug (New Era) Tebhaga
Khamar (three share farm) which the government adopted as the Packaged
Input Programme.[4] In
order to make the project more effective, Yunus and his associates
proposed the Gram Sarkar (the village government)
programme.[7] Introduced by then
president Ziaur
Rahman in late 1970s, the Government formed 40,392 village
governments (gram sarkar) as a fourth layer of government in 2003. On 2
August 2005, in response to a petition filed by Bangladesh Legal Aids and
Services Trust (BLAST) the High Court had declared Gram Sarkar illegal
and unconstitutional.[8]
Grameen
Bank
Grameen Bank Head Office at Mirpur-2,
Dhaka
- Main article:
Grameen
Bank
In 1976, during visits to the poorest households in the village of
Jobra near
Chittagong University, Yunus discovered that very small loans could
make a disproportionate difference to a poor person. Jobra women who made
bamboo furnitures
had to take out
usurious loans for
buying bamboo, to pay their profits to the moneylenders. His first loan,
consisting of USD
27.00 from his own pocket, was made to 42 women in the village, who made
a net profit of
BDT
0.50 (USD 0.02) each on the
loan[2]
The concept of providing credit to the poor as a tool of poverty
reduction was not unique. Dr.
Akhtar
Hameed Khan, founder of Pakistan Academy for Rural Development (now
Bangladesh Academy for Rural Development), is credited for pioneering
the idea.[9] However, from his
experience at Jobra Yunus, an admirer of Dr.
Hamid[9], realized that an
institution is needed to be created to lend to those who had
nothing.[10] While, traditional
banks were not
interested in making tiny loans at reasonable interest rates to poor
people, because of high repayment
risks[11], Yunus believed
that given the chance the poor will repay the borrowed money and hence
microcredit
could be a viable
business
model.
Yunus finally succeeded in securing a loan from the government
Janata Bank
to lend it to the poor in Jobra in December 1976. The institution
continued to operate by securing loans from other banks for its projects.
By 1982, the bank had 28,000 members. On
October 1,
1983, the pilot
project began operations as a full-fledged bank and was renamed the
Grameen
Bank (Village Bank) to make loans to poor Bangladeshis. Yunus
and his colleagues encountered everything from violent radical leftists
to the conservative clergy who told women that they would be denied a
Muslim burial if they borrowed money from the Grameen
Bank.[3] As of July 2007, Grameen
Bank has issued US$ 6.38 billion to 7.4 million
borrowers.[12] To ensure repayment, the
bank uses a system of "solidarity groups". These small informal
groups apply together for loans and its members act as co-guarantors of
repayment and support one another's efforts at economic
self-advancement.[7]
The Grameen Bank started to diversify in the late 1980s when it
started attending to unutilized or underutilized fishing ponds, as well
as irrigation pumps like deep
tubewells.[13] In 1989, these
diversified interests started growing into separate organizations, as the
fisheries project became
Grameen
Motsho (Grameen Fisheries Foundation) and the irrigation project
became
Grameen
Krishi (Grameen Agriculture
Foundation).[13] Over time, the
Grameen initiative has grown into a multi-faceted group of profitable and
non-profit ventures, including major projects like
Grameen
Trust and
Grameen
Fund, which runs equity projects like
Grameen Software Limited,
Grameen CyberNet Limited, and
Grameen Knitwear Limited,[14] as
well as
Grameen
Telecom, which has a stake in
Grameenphone
(GP), biggest private sector phone company in
Bangladesh.[15]. The
Village
Phone (Polli Phone) project of GP has brought cell-phone ownership to
260,000 rural poor in over 50,000 villages since the beginning of the
project in March 1997.[16]
The success of the Grameen model of microfinancing has inspired
similar efforts in a hundred countries throughout the
developing
world and even in
industrialized nations, including the
United
States.[17] Many, but not all,
microcredit projects also retain its emphasis on lending specifically to
women. More than 94% of Grameen loans have gone to women, who suffer
disproportionately from poverty and who are more likely than men to
devote their earnings to their
families.[18] For his work with the
Grameen Bank, Yunus was named an
Ashoka: Innovators for the Public Global Academy Member in
2001.[19]
- Further information:
Grameen family of organizations
[
edit]
Recognitions
Muhammad Yunus accepting the Nobel Peace Prize for 2006.
- Main article:
List of awards received by Muhammad Yunus
Muhammad Yunus was awarded the 2006
Nobel
Peace Prize, along with Grameen Bank, for their efforts to create
economic and social development. In the prize announcement The
Norwegian Nobel Committee
mentioned:[1]
- Muhammad Yunus has shown himself to be a leader who has managed to
translate visions into practical action for the benefit of millions of
people, not only in Bangladesh, but also in many other countries. Loans
to poor people without any financial security had appeared to be an
impossible idea. From modest beginnings three decades ago, Yunus has,
first and foremost through Grameen Bank, developed micro-credit into an
ever more important instrument in the struggle against poverty.
Muhammad Yunus was the first
Bangladeshi
and third
Bengali
to ever get a Nobel Prize. After receiving the news of the important
award, Yunus announced that he would use part of his share of the $1.4
million award money to create a company to make low-cost, high-nutrition
food for the poor; while the rest would go toward setting up an eye
hospital for the poor in Bangladesh.[20]
Former
U.S.
president Bill
Clinton was a vocal advocate for the awarding of the Nobel Prize to
Muhammed Yunus. He expressed this in
Rolling
Stone magazine[21] as well as in his
autobiography
My Life.[22] In a speech given at
University of California, Berkeley in 2002, President Clinton
described Dr. Yunus as "a man who long ago should have won the Nobel
Prize [and] I’ll keep saying that until they finally give it to
him."[23]
He has won a number of other awards, including the
Ramon
Magsaysay Award,[24] the
World Food
Prize[25] the
Sydney
Peace Prize, [26] and in December 2007 the
Ecuadorian Peace Prize [27]. Additionally, Dr.
Yunus has been awarded 26
honorary
doctorate degrees, and 15 special awards.[28]
Bangladesh government brought out a commemorative stamp to honor his
Nobel Award.[29]
Political activity
In early 2006 he, along with
other members of the civil society including Prof
Rehman
Sobhan, Justice
Muhammad Habibur Rahman, Dr
Kamal
Hossain,
Matiur Rahman,
Mahfuz Anam
and
Debapriya Bhattchariya, participated in a campaign for honest and
clean candidates in national elections.[30] He
considered entering politics in the later part of that
year.[31] On
February 11,
2007, Yunus wrote
an open letter, published in the Bangladeshi newspaper
Daily Star, where he asked citizens for views on his plan to float a
political party to establish political goodwill, proper leadership and
good governance. In the letter, he called on everyone to briefly outline
how he should go about the task and how they can contribute to
it.[32] Yunus finally announced the foundation of
a new party tentatively called
Citizens'
Power (Nagorik Shakti) on
February 18,
2007
.[33][34] There was
speculation that the army supported a move by Yunus into
politics.[35] On
May 3, however,
Yunus declared that he had decided to abandon his political plans
following a meeting with the head of the interim government,
Fakhruddin
Ahmed.[36]
On July 18,
2007 in
Johannesburg
, South
Africa,
Nelson
Mandela,
Graça
Machel, and
Desmond
Tutu convened a group of world leaders to contribute their wisdom,
independent leadership and integrity together to the world. Nelson
Mandela announced the formation of this new group, The
Global
Elders, in a speech he delivered on the occasion of his 89th
birthday.[37][38]
Archbishop Tutu is to serve as the Chair of The Elders. The founding
members of this group include Machel,
Kofi Annan,
Ela Bhatt,
Gro
Harlem Brundtland,
Jimmy
Carter, Li
Zhaoxing,
Mary
Robinson and Yunus. The Elders are to be independently funded by a
group of Founders, including
Richard
Branson,
Peter
Gabriel, Ray Chambers; Michael Chambers; Bridgeway Foundation; Pam
Omidyar, Humanity United; Amy Robbins; Shashi Ruia, Dick Tarlow; and The
United Nations Foundation.
Family
In 1967 while Yunus attended
Vanderbilt University, he met Vera Forostenko, a student of
Russian
literature at Vanderbilt University and daughter of
Russian
immigrants to
Trenton, New
Jersey,
U.S. They
were married in
1970.[6][3] Yunus's
marriage with Vera ended within months of the birth of their baby girl,
Monica
Yunus (b. 1979
Chittagong),
as Vera returned to New Jersey claiming that Bangladesh was not a good
place to raise a
baby.[6][3] Yunus
later married Afrozi Yunus, who was then a researcher in
physics at
Manchester University.[6] She was later
appointed as a professor of physics at
Jahangirnagar University. Their daughter Deena Afroz Yunus was born
in 1986.[6]
His brothers are also active in academia. His brother Muhammad Ibrahim is
a professor of physics at
Dhaka
University and the founder of The Center for Mass Education in
Science (CMES), which brings science education to adolescent girls in
villages.[39] His younger brother Muhammad
Jahangir is a popular television presenter. Monica, the eldest daughter
of Yunus, is a
Bangladeshi
-Russian
American
soprano
singer, working in New York
City.[40]
References
- ^ a b
The Nobel Peace Prize for 2006. NobelPrize.org
(2006
-10-13).
Retrieved on
2006
-10-13.
- ^ a b
c
First
loan he gave was $27 from own pocket, The Daily Star,
2006
-10-14, Front
page, Retrieved:
2007
-08-22
- ^ a b
c d
e f
Mhammad Yunus: The triumph of idealism, New Age Special, The New Age,
2007-01-01; Retrieved:
2007
-09-11
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h Yunus, Muhammad. Printed interview
in
Bengali
with Rahman,
Matiur. . The daily
Prothom
Alo., Dhaka.
14. Retrieved on
2006
-10-14.
- ^
Yunus to
receive Nichols-Chancellor's Medal, Vanderbilt News, 2007-03-12;
Retrieved:
2007
-09-09
- ^ a b
c d
e Yunus, Muhammad; Jolis, Alan [2003-09-25].
Banker to
the Poor: micro-lending and the battle against world poverty (in
English). New York: PublicAffairs hc, 20-29.
ISBN 978-1-58648-198-8.
- ^ a b
Ramon Magsaysay Award Citation. Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation
(1984). Retrieved on
2007
-08-17.
- ^
BANGLADESH: Country of Origin Information Report, Country of Origin
Information Service, Border & Immigration Agency, 2007-06-15;
Retrieved:
2007
-09-09
- ^ a b Yousaf,
Nasim
(2006
-10-17).
7th Death Anniversary – A Tribute to Dr. Akhter Hameed Khan
(English). Statesman. Retrieved on
2007
-08-20.
- ^ Yunus, Muhammad; Jolis, Alan [2003-09-25].
Banker to
the Poor: micro-lending and the battle against world poverty (in
English). New York: PublicAffairs hc, 46-49.
ISBN 978-1-58648-198-8.
- ^
"
Profile: 'World banker to the poor'", BBC NEWS,
2006
-10-13.
Retrieved on
2006
-10-16.
(English)
- ^
GB at a glance, Muhammad Yunus, Grameen Info;Retrieved:
2007
-09-09
- ^ a b
Introduction,
Muhammad Yunus, Grameen Family; Retrieved:
2007
-09-07
- ^
Grameen
Fund ventures on Grameen official website
- ^
About
Grameenphone (English). Grameenphone
(2006
-11-16).
Retrieved on
2007
-08-22.
“Grameenphone is now the leading telecommunications service provider in
the country with more than 10 million subscribers as of November 2006.”
- ^
Village Phone
(English). About Grameenphone. Grameenphone (2006). Retrieved on
2007
-08-22.
- ^
Grameen Bank, a Nobel-winning concept, The Hindu,
2006-10-23;Retrieved:
2007
-09-09
- ^ Yunus, Muhammad. Transcript of broadcast
interview with Negus, George.
World in
Focus: Interview with Prof. Muhammad Yunus. Foreign Correspondent;
ABC online. 1997-03-25. Retrieved on
2007
-08-22.
- ^
Muhammad Yunus, Ashoka's Global
Academy Member, Wins Nobel Peace Prize (English). Ashoka.org
(2006
-10-13).
Retrieved on
2007
-08-17.
- ^
"Yunus wins peace
Nobel for anti-poverty efforts", AP,
2006
-10-13.
Retrieved on
2007
-08-16.
(English)
- ^ Boulden, Jim.
"
The birth of micro credit", Europe/Business, CNN,
2001
-03-29.
Retrieved on
2007
-08-19.
(English)
- ^
Clinton,
Bill (2004).
My Life: The Presidential Years (in English). New York, Knopf.:
Vintage Books, p. 329.
ISBN 0375414576. “Muhammad Yunus should have been awarded the Nobel
Prize in Economics years ago.”
- ^ Ainsworth, Diane
(2002
-01-29).
Transcript of the Jan. 29, 2002 talk by former President Bill Clinton at
the University of California, Berkeley (English). Clinton: education,
economic development key to building a peaceful, global village.
UC Regents. Retrieved on
2007
-08-22.
- ^
Ramon Magsaysay Award, 1984: Citation for Muhammad Yunus; Retrieved:
2007
-09-01
- ^
Dr.
Muhammad Yunus - 1994 World Food Prize Laureate (English).
WorldFoodPrize.org. Retrieved on
2007
-08-29.
- ^
Lauret
2006, Seoul Peace Prize website; Retrieved:
2007
-09-09
- ^
[1], Wild River Review Coverage; Retrieved:
2007
-12-03
- ^ Lists of his awards are found at
Grameen Bank
website,
his
personal website, and
his profile at Bangladesh News website.
- ^
Sydney Peace Prize recipients, Sydney Peace Prize Foundation website;
Retrieved:
2007
-09-09
- ^
Parliament
with honest, efficient must for development. The New Nation
(2006
-03-21).
Retrieved on
2007
-08-22.
- ^ Staff Correspondent.
"
Yunus not willing to be caretaker chief",
The Daily Star,
2006
-10-18. Vol 5
Num 853. Retrieved on
2007
-08-18.
(English)
- ^ Staff Correspondent.
"
Yunus seeks people's views on floating political party",
The Daily Star,
2007
-02-12. Vol
5 Num 961. Retrieved on
2007
-08-18.
(English)
- ^ Siddique, Islam.
"
Bangladesh Nobel Laureate Announces His Political Party's Name",
AHN,
2007
-02-18.
7006502326. Retrieved on
2007
-08-18.
(English)
- ^ Staff Reporter.
"
'I will do politics of unity': Yunus names his party Nagorik
Shakti", The New Nation,
2007
-02-12.
34138. Retrieved on
2007
-08-18.
(English)
- ^ Mustafa, Sabir.
"
Bangladesh at a crossroads",
BBC,
2007
-04-05.
Retrieved on
2007
-08-18.
(English) "At first glance, the current state of Bangladesh appears
to be a paradox : a country under a state of emergency, but where the
general public seem quite content."
- ^
"
Yunus drops plans to enter politics",
Al Jazeera,
2007
-02-18.
Retrieved on
2007
-08-18.
(English)
- ^
"
Mandela unveils 'council of elders'",
Al Jazeera,
2007
-07-19.
Retrieved on
2007
-08-24.
(English)
- ^
Associated
Press. "Mandela joins ‘Elders’ on turning 89",
MSNBC,
2007
-07-20.
19836050. Retrieved on
2007
-08-24.
(English)
- ^
Center for Mass Education in Science (CMES) - Bangladesh, Human
Resource Development Recommendations, International Labour Organization;
Retrieved:
2007
-08-27
- ^
Monica Yunus,
Soprano (asp) (English). Biography. VoxPagel.com. Retrieved on
2007
-09-02.
See
also
Sustainable development Portal
Bangladesh Portal
External
links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Muhammad Yunus
2007/2008 Lectures
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