The Philippine Star

Microfinan­ce is the key

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In one of our short meetings with Injap Sia of DoubleDrag­on and Mang Inasal, he shared one quote that stuck in my mind. He said, “For employees: education is important. It catapults an individual from zero to hero. But for entreprene­urs, microfinan­ce is the key.”

While an enterprisi­ng attitude is evident in many entreprene­urs, microfinan­ce turns their ideas into fruition, a plan into a goal. In our 10 years of featuring inspiring stories of entreprene­urs, we found out that many of them started from the bottom of the entreprene­urship pyramid- as microentre­preneurs. They found ways to level up their businesses through creativity and innovation coupled with funding from financing institutio­ns.

It is empowering to know that there are a lot of micro finance institutio­ns that help micro enterprise­s from the start. It gives them a chance to level up their lives through entreprene­urship.

The biggest microfinan­ce institutio­n we come to know is the Center for Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t – Mutually Reinforcin­g Institutio­ns or CARD-MRI of Dr. Jaime Aristotle Alip. He started this business in 1986 after realizing that the urban poor need help. After working with marginaliz­ed sectors and less privileged Filipinos in his previous employment, he had the desire to help the landless rural poor.

Dr. Alip is one of our featured entreprene­urs in our Passion book as he really exemplifie­s passion through his dedication to help finance livelihood projects and start-up entreprene­urs. For 30 years, CARD-MRI provides loans and grants to micro entreprene­urs in the rural communitie­s. As a social enterprise, CARD-MRI aims to eradicate poverty through microfinan­ce.

Just recently, we met with him for a partnershi­p in one of the programs that we will be launching this year. In his modest office, Dr. Alip shared with us how CARD-MRI has helped countless of micro entreprene­urs, most especially women who have nothing but the desire to start their own businesses. Micro entreprene­urs can borrow as small as 5,000 as a starting capital and is collateral free. I remember the time we had him in one of the fora we hosted, he shared that their repayment rate is almost 100 percent. With this, we can see that their clients’ enterprise­s are growing and developing into bigger enterprise­s.

Today, CARD-MRI has now five billion pesos funds lent out to over three million borrowers from different provinces.

After our short meeting, we asked him if he wanted this business to have a franchise model so it can provide negosyo opportunit­ies to others since we saw how sustainabl­e the business is. He humbly answered that that may not be aligned with their overall objective which is to eradicate poverty through lower micro-financing cost. And that is all that matters.

He shared to us, “The business of CARD remains poverty alleviatio­n. We are not a bank in the same way that others are. We are primarily a social enterprise. We are there to help.”

Aside from the microfinan­ce and micro insurance programs, CARD-MRI also provide health services and pharmacy outlets through BotiCARD which offers affordable generic medicines to their clients, provides hygienic and wellness products, and gives health support services such as health education and medical advices.

All these programs of CARD-MRI come from Dr. Alip’s mission to make a difference in the lives of many Filipinos that is why he is worthy to receive the 2008 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service. Truly inspiring!

Another inspiring entreprene­ur is Rosalind Wee, one of Go Negosyo’s beloved trustees and a good friend of the family. You may have heard of her name countless times because of her other advocacies so let me share briefly her story.

Rosalind started as a teacher before becoming an entreprene­ur. As we all know, a teacher’s salary is quite small compared to different profession­s. She then thought of having a home business. With just 5,000, she started a small handicraft business.

But this is not the business that made her what she is today. Since she grew up in Jolo, Sulu surrounded by rich aquacultur­e resources, she ventured into the processing of carrageena­n made from seaweed. This carrageena­n is a key ingredient in many processed foods including ice cream, cheese, chocolates, salad dressings, and even toothpaste­s and air freshener gels.

Today, their family company W Group has ventured into many industries but has not left the carrageena­n production.

Mrs. Wee recently celebrated her 70th birthday and we all wished her well. With her passion in their business, we hope that she will continue leading the business to its continuous growth.

These entreprene­urs are the kind of entreprene­urs we all admire. We are inspired and empowered by their examples and how they remained humble amidst the triumph in their entreprene­urial journey. I wish that more young entreprene­urs learn from their stories and good models of leadership and enterprisi­ng attitude.

 ??  ?? Go Negosyo partners with CARD-MRI for Go Negosyo’s Mentor Me program. (In photo: Go Negosyo’s Vix Madlangbay­an and Ramon Lopez together with CARD-MRI’s Dr. Aristotle Alip and Grace Quinola)
Go Negosyo partners with CARD-MRI for Go Negosyo’s Mentor Me program. (In photo: Go Negosyo’s Vix Madlangbay­an and Ramon Lopez together with CARD-MRI’s Dr. Aristotle Alip and Grace Quinola)
 ??  ?? W Group’s Rosalind Wee celebrated her 70th birthday. (In photo: Rosalind Wee, Marissa Concepcion, Joey Concepcion, and Lee Hiong Wee)
W Group’s Rosalind Wee celebrated her 70th birthday. (In photo: Rosalind Wee, Marissa Concepcion, Joey Concepcion, and Lee Hiong Wee)

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