Petita Jacoba Choez Suarez


Status: Paying Back

$675.00   Loan Amount
62% repaid

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Petita Jacoba Choez Suarez
Location: Jipijapa, Ecuador
Activity: Retail

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $675.00
Loan Use: Comprar más mercadería surtida al por mayor
Repayment Term: 6 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: N/A
Date Listed: Sep 1, 2009
Date Disbursed: Jul 29, 2009
Date Funded:Sep 2, 2009

About the Country

Country:Ecuador
Avg Annual Income:$4,776.00
Currency:United States Dollars (USD)



Señora Petita is 39 years old. She is married, and has 3 small children, an 8-year-old, a 5-year-old, and a 2-month-old baby. She works as a salesperson, selling items for the home on credit from door to door. For example, she sells sheets, bedspreads and plastic bed covers. She has been doing this job for 10 years. Her husband already was in this line of work when they met, and she decided to accompany him on his job. They travel within the Manabí region to make their sales, generally selling in places that lie about one hour from Jipijapa, such as Portoviejo and Manta. Most of the time, they sell their items to familiar customers, and their customers pay them for the goods in weekly installments.

Señora Petita is requesting a loan in order to be able to buy a variety of more merchandise at wholesale. She says that for the future she would like to have a good economic foundation and a little car, although she does see the difficulty of achieving success within the world's current economic situation. Her sales have dropped recently, and she is considering changing her business sometime in the near future. Her husband is also a cabinet-maker, and she would like run a carpentry business with him. She thinks that such a business would be more stable, and would give them the chance to remain closer to their children as well (a cousin watches over them when she and her husband go out to sell).

Señora Petita is a member of the Banco Comunal Nuevos Horizontes, which meets every 2 weeks in Jipijapa, Manabí, near the Ecuadorian coast. Her bank is a large group that has worked many times with Fundación ESPOIR, and whose members support each other very well. Señora Petita has spent 3 years working with her communal bank, and says that she likes it because ther are few places that are able to provide her with money so easily, without demanding excessive guarantees or paperwork. The important thing, Señora Petita says, is to be responsible.


Translated from Spanish by Kevin Lenhart, Kiva Volunteer


Sra. Petita tiene 39 años, es casada, y tiene 3 hijos pequeños de 8 y 5 años más un bebé de 2 meses. Ella trabaja como comerciante, vendiendo artículos para el hogar a crédito de casa en casa. Por ejemplo, vende sábanas, plásticos, y cubrecamas. Lleva ya 10 años con este trabajo, su esposo ya trabajaba en eso cuando se conocieron, entonces ella decidió acompañarle con su trabajo. Ellos viajan dentro de la región de Manabí para hacer sus ventas, por lo general venden en lugares que quedan a una hora de Jipijapa como Portoviejo y Manta. Venden más que nada a gente conocida; sus clientes pagan cuotas semanales.

Sra. Petita está pidiendo un crédito para poder comprar más mercadería surtida al por mayor. Dice que para el futuro le gustaría tener una buena situación económica y un carrito, pero lo ve algo difícil con la situación actual de la economía mundial. Han bajado sus ventas en este último tiempo. Ella está pensando en cambiar de negocio en algún momento en el futuro. Su esposo también es ebanista, entonces a ella le gustaría poner un negocio de carpintería. Piensa que este negocio sería más estable, y además le daría la oportunidad de estar más cerca de sus hijos (actualmente una prima les cuida cuando ella sale a vender).

La señora es socia del Banco Comunal Nuevos Horizontes, el cual se reúne cada 2 semanas en Jipijapa, Manabí, cerca de la costa ecuatoriana. Es un grupo grande que ya tiene bastante tiempo trabajando con la fundación, las socias se llevan muy bien entre ellas. Sra. Petita lleva 3 años trabajando con su banco comunal, y dice que le gusta porque hay pocos lugares que dan dinero con la misma facilidad, sin pedir muchas garantías ni muchos papeles. Lo importante es ser responsable, dice ella.

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Journal entries for Petita Jacoba Choez Suarez


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Petita Jacoba Choez Suarez
Location: Jipijapa, Ecuador

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to PETITA JACOBA CHOEZ SUAREZ by Fundación ESPOIR in Ecuador. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the 3 months of this loan, Fundación ESPOIR will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Jipijapa, Ecuador
Sep 3, 2009
Comment on this entry

Kiva Field Update - Message from Kiva Fellow in Ecuador
 
Entrepreneur: Petita Jacoba Choez Suarez
Location: Jipijapa, Ecuador

Dear Lender,

As you may know, all Kiva loans are actually administered by local field partners. For the past couple of months, I have been working as a Kiva Fellow with Fundación ESPOIR, a brand new Kiva field partner. Over the course of the summer, I’ve had the privilege of meeting Espoir’s first batch of Kiva borrowers and hearing their stories.

A couple of the most memorable stories I heard were from two young women who are using loans to help run their small businesses while also pursuing their education. The first, Verónica Acurio, worked for years in her parents’ restaurant before deciding to open a restaurant of her own. She now has her own restaurant and uses the profits to pay for medical school. She has one year of studies left before becoming a full-fledged doctor. Despite her impressive accomplishments, Verónica is very down to earth and not at all boastful. Before her Kiva interview, most of her fellow group members didn’t even realize that she is a medical student.

Another Kiva client, Ana Lucia Chapa, lives in the rural community of Turi with her husband and her four-year-old son. Monday through Friday, she makes the long commute to and from the city of Cuenca, where she works full-time as a housekeeper. She also raises guinea pigs, sheep, and cows at home for extra income. Ana Lucia dropped out of school when she was 14 to start working so that she could help support her family, and so she never finished high school. After she got married, though, she decided that she wanted to be a veterinarian, and started going to school on the weekends to earn her high school diploma. She still has eight or nine years of education ahead of her before she can officially become a veterinarian, but she has a great attitude and is determined. Her family has been supportive and her parents and in-laws help take care of her son while she works and studies.

Both Veronica and Ana Lucia are 23 years old, just like me. When I heard their stories, I was impressed that they could juggle so many responsibilities simultaneously and overcome such daunting obstacles in pursuit of higher education, which is more than I can say for myself. Both are cheerful and upbeat despite the difficulties they face and the long hours they put in, seven days a week. I hope to return to Cuenca ten years from now and find them both in white coats, running their own successful businesses of another sort.

Kiva clients aren’t the only people at ESPOIR with inspiring stories of upward mobility. I’ve also had the privilege of meeting staff at ESPOIR’s headquarters and four different branch offices. All received me warmly and touched me with their hospitality and generosity, but I was particularly impressed by a handful of female ESPOIR loan officers who were once village bank clients themselves. For these women, becoming loan officers is an important step forward in their lives. They find the work difficult but also quite gratifying, and are happy to be helping clients because they know how it feels to be a small-scale entrepreneur in need of business capital.

It has been exciting and inspirational to see success stories like these during my fellowship with Fundación ESPOIR. I hope you continue to support Ecuadorian entrepreneurs through ESPOIR!

To search for currently fundraising ESPOIR loans on Kiva, click here . No currently fundraising clients? Please check back soon! In the meantime, you can join ESPOIR’s Kiva Lending Team.

Best regards,

Cynthia McMurry

Kiva Fellow


Posted by Julie Ross, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Sep 10, 2009
Comments (5)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Petita Jacoba Choez Suarez

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
November 2009 $253.13 $253.13 Repayment Received
December 2009 $168.75 $169.45 Repayment Received
January 2010 $253.12 Available Jan 1