Philippine Daily Inquirer

An admirable Filipina

- JOEL RUIZ BUTUYAN

She has succeeded in what many consider an impossible mission. While banks avoid lending to the poor because of high credit risk, she actively seeks out the poor and lends exclusivel­y to them. While the government has repeatedly failed in its microloan programs for the poor because of high default rates, she lends out a yearly total of P2.5 billion in microloans to the poorest of our poor, and they are paying back in full.

Ruth Callanta is president of the Center for Community Transforma­tion (CCT), a nongovernm­ent organizati­on (NGO) that is transformi­ng the lives of impoverish­ed families. Nearly a million poor Filipinos were beneficiar­ies of services extended by CCT in 2017 alone.

When Callanta set up CCT in 1991, it had zero budget. Today, it has P2 billion in assets, 176 offices nationwide, and 1,300 full-time staff. CCT is now an umbrella organizati­on of a group of 16 interdepen­dent NGOs that serve underprivi­leged sectors such as street dwellers, farmers, fisherfolk, factory workers, out-of-school youth, microentre­preneurs and indigenous people.

CCT’s mission is to break generation­al poverty and generation­al street-dwelling in our country. To achieve its mission, CCT employs a novel approach that aims to transform three aspects of the lives of the poor, namely: spiritual, social and economic.

The CCT approach starts with its staff members immersing themselves in a sector. They organize groups that engage in weekly Bible and prayer sessions. The aim is for a spiritual transforma­tion that will strengthen the moral character of the participan­ts, and firm up their sense of fair dealings with the community.

While others have trepidatio­ns about injecting a spiritual component to social work advocacy, the reality is that religious associatio­ns are our society’s only institutio­ns that effectivel­y work to keep alive our fast-vanishing tenet of empathy for the less fortunate.

The upright conduct that results from spiritual transforma­tion constitute­s the vital component that brings about social and economic transforma­tion. This appears to be the key element missing in the microcredi­t failures of the government and banking institutio­ns. And this is the pivotal component that enables CCT to achieve a loan repayment rate of 98.2 percent.

When a yearning for change becomes evident in the prayer groups, CCT then extends loans that enable members to become microentre­preneurs. Others are taught vocational skills and then assisted in obtaining jobs as constructi­on laborers, factory workers or office staff. The continuing prayer sessions engender an implicit group pressure for members to promptly pay their loans, a feature similar to the Grameen microcredi­t system in Bangladesh.

The credit cooperativ­es organized by CCT enable the co-op members to substantia­lly earn back the loan interest they pay each year. A savings associatio­n has also been formed to inculcate the habit of saving; total savings amounted to P413 million in 2017. CCT also operates training centers, boarding schools for the poor and community-based kindergart­ens.

The CCT approach developed by Callanta has become so successful that it has been copied by many microfinan­ce institutio­ns around the world. It has made her a renowned leader in the antipovert­y movement.

CCT obtains the bulk of its funding from its own operations, which proves that the poor can pay for their own developmen­t. There are also wealthy philanthro­pists—among them the families behind Security Bank, The Generics Pharmacy, United Neon and 200 other corporatio­ns—who silently support CCT programs without fanfare and publicity.

Every year, we heap adulation on businessme­n who make it to the world’s list of billionair­es. We live at a time when the capitalist ethos of insatiable self-enrichment is worshipped.

But when the scourge of poverty afflicts half of our population, the truly admirable members of our society who deserve our people’s adulation are those who take the less traveled road of selflessly serving the poor.

Ruth Callanta is an admirable exemplar of the Filipino race. Commentsto­fleamarket­ofideas@gmail.com

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