Philippine Daily Inquirer

Companies urged to set aside obsession with ‘profit maximizati­on’

- By Doris C. Dumlao

NOBEL Peace Prize laureate and microfinan­ce guru Muhammad Yunus has called on the private sector to set aside obsession with “profit maximizati­on” to increase focus on the “real business of people” and achieve the overarchin­g goal of poverty reduction.

Yunus, the founder of Grameen Bank of Bangladesh, was in town last week for the 2013 Microcredi­t Summit, which was attended by 800 delegates from more than 60 countries who committed to the advancemen­t of microfinan­ce to end extreme poverty.

In a roundtable with reporters, Yunus said that as the Millennium Developmen­t Goal (MDG) was going to an end by 2015 —the goal of which is to halve poverty incidence—the global community was next looking to total eradicatio­n of poverty by 2030.

Yunus said banking systems around the world would have to be redesigned to pave the way for financial inclusion, with microfinan­ce having proven itself over the years as a “doable thing.”

“It’s financiall­y viable. it’s a business propositio­n. It’s not a charity propositio­n,” he said.

He said global leaders should be taking efforts to ensure that nobody was excluded from this service, adding that a lot more should be done to reach out to people.

“We’re not just promoting microcredi­t. We’re saying everybody has to be included, bring them into the financial network so they can change their own life... without state interventi­on,” Yunus said, adding that doleout was not sustainabl­e as this would go only to consumptio­n purposes.

He said there must be a paradigm shift within the private sector to “delink itself from profit maximizati­on” and “profitmaki­ng.”

“My position is that profit-making has pushed us away from the real business of people,” he said.

Asked about the common challenge of scaling up among microfinan­ce institutio­ns (MFIs), Yunus said Grameen Bank had no problem scaling up as itwas a selfrelian­t bank that could open branches, thereby mobilize savings that could be lent out.

But for other MFIs without deposit-taking capabiliti­es, he said it was indeed a problem to scale up operations as they would be dependent on external sources of funds. What Bangladesh has done, he said, was to create a fund that MFIs without deposit-taking capabiliti­es could access. Such a fund has been able to bankroll the expansion of MFIs’ lending coverage.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines