Albuquerque Journal

Donations to microlende­rs pay major returns

- BY FINANCE NEW MEXICO Finance New Mexico is a public service initiative to assist individual­s and businesses with obtaining skills and funding resources for their business or idea. To learn more, go to www.FinanceNew­Mexico.org.

Philanthro­pic giving is a $300 billion industry in the United States and New Mexicans do their part every year to underwrite the causes that matter most to them.

According to one organizati­on that tracks philanthro­pic giving, the top recipients in 2014 were organizati­ons devoted to education, human services, health, animals and the environmen­t, public-social causes, arts, culture and the humanities, internatio­nal disaster relief and religion or spirituali­ty.

While they seem invisible within these general categories, nonprofit organizati­ons that promote grass-roots economic developmen­t — The Loan Fund, Accion and WESST among them — also rely on private giving to support and enable individual entreprene­urship in our state.

Microlende­rs on a mission

Accion, The Loan Fund and WESST manage separate pools of private and public money, which they make available as loans and lines of credit to small businesses in New Mexico — especially startup businesses, and those in chronicall­y underserve­d communitie­s and population­s.

All three also support their clients’ success by offering other services, such as business counseling, training and mentoring.

Thoughtful contributi­ons — better known as social investment­s — to any one of these organizati­ons have a way of living indefinite­ly into the future.

When loans are repaid, for example, the money becomes available to other entreprene­urs who want to start or expand a business. Better yet, clients who obtain a loan from one of these organizati­ons get something more than temporary aid for an urgent need: They get the technical and financial resources, and ongoing assistance to become financiall­y independen­t by turning a talent or idea into a profitable venture.

And when that business buys supplies and services from local vendors — and pays its employees — it injects even more cash into the local community.

Because of this exponentia­l effect, a relatively small social investment in a nonprofit lender can snowball into something significan­t. It can also attract other contributi­ons, further magnifying the impact.

While WESST, The Loan Fund and Accion all started with small pools of money, the results they achieved were noticed by the New Mexico Small Business Investment Corp., which provides funds to all three for lending.

Social investing matters

In 2014, almost 38 percent of WESST’s revenue came from private contributi­ons and in-kind donations. The rest came from grants and earned revenue, including interest and loan fees. Between 2010 and 2014, the organizati­on created 1,232 jobs and 228 businesses that generated revenues of $238.6 million.

Almost 57 percent of Accion’s total 2014 revenue came from various contributi­ons and in-kind donations. The rest came from earned revenue, including loan interest, fees and investment­s. Last year, the organizati­on provided 1,239 loans worth more than $12 million, creating or supporting 2,564 jobs in the four-state region it serves.

This year alone, The Loan Fund will provide more than $6.5 million in new loans to New Mexico small businesses, creating or preserving more than 550 jobs. The Loan Fund has a total active loan portfolio of more than $13 million it has provided to small businesses that collective­ly produce $100 million in annual sales revenue. About 70 percent of The Loan Fund’s revenues are generated through earned income.

As these numbers illustrate, anyone interested in making a social investment in New Mexico might consider organizati­ons like these, which help strengthen local communitie­s one business at a time.

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